BRICS An Anti-Capitalist Critique Bond BRICS prelims.indd 1 30/06/2015 13:07 Bond BRICS prelims.indd 2 30/06/2015 13:07 B R I C S An Anti-Capitalist Critique edited by Patrick Bond and Ana Garcia Bond BRICS prelims.indd 3 30/06/2015 13:07 First published 2015 by Pluto Press 345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA www.plutobooks.com Copyright © Patrick Bond and Ana Garcia 2015 The right of Patrick Bond and Ana Garcia to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978 0 7453 3636 7 Hardback ISBN 978 0 7453 3641 1 Paperback ISBN 978 1 7837 1687 6 PDF eBook ISBN 978 1 7837 1689 0 Kindle eBook ISBN 978 1 7837 1688 3 EPUB eBook This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental standards of the country of origin. Printed in the United Kingdom Bond BRICS prelims.indd 4 30/06/2015 13:07 Contents List of contributors vii List of abbreviations xiii 1. Introduction Ana Garcia and Patrick Bond 1 Part 1: Sub-imperial, inter-imperial or capitalist-imperial? 2. B RICS and the sub-imperial location Patrick Bond 15 3. Sub-imperialism, the highest stage of dependent capitalism Mathias Luce 27 4. B RICS, capitalist-imperialism and new contradictions Virginia Fontes 45 5. B RICS, the G20 and the American Empire Leo Panitch 61 6. C apitalist mutations in emerging, intermediate and peripheral neoliberalism Claudio Katz 70 Part 2: BRICS ‘develop’ Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe 7. B RICS corporate snapshots during African extractivism Baruti Amisi, Patrick Bond, Richard Kamidza, Farai Maguwu and Bobby Peek 97 8. T he story of the hunter or the hunted? Brazil’s role in Angola and Mozambique Ana Garcia and Karina Kato 117 v Brics layout.indd 5 2015/06/10 10:55 AM BRICS 9. China’s geopolitical oil strategy in the Andean region Omar Bonilla Martinez 135 10. T he transnationalisation of Brazilian construction companies Pedro Henrique Campos 148 11. Behind the image of South–South solidarity at Brazil’s Vale Judith Marshall 162 12. R io’s ruinous mega-events Einar Braathen, Gilmar Mascarenhas and Celina Sørbøe 186 13. Modern Russia as semi-peripheral, dependent capitalism Ruslan Dzarasov 200 14. R ussia’s neoliberal imperialism and the Eurasian challenge Gonzalo Pozo 206 Part 3: BRICS within global capitalism 15. BRICS and transnational capitalism William Robinson 231 16. BRICS at the brink of the fossil bonanza Elmar Altvater 236 17. Scramble, resistance and a new non-alignment strategy Sam Moyo and Paris Yeros 246 18. The BRICS’ dangerous endorsement of ‘financial inclusion’ Susanne Soederberg 251 19. C hina and the lingering Pax Americana Ho-fung Hung 254 20. T he future trajectory of BRICS Achin Vanaik 261 21. Does the South have a possible history? Vijay Prashad 266 22. Whose interests are served by the BRICS? Immanuel Wallerstein 269 23. BRICS after the Durban and Fortaleza summits Niall Reddy 274 24. B uilding BRICS from below? Ana Garcia 279 25. C o-dependent BRICS from above, co-opted BRICS from the middle, and confrontational BRICS from below Patrick Bond 286 Index 297 vi Brics layout.indd 6 2015/06/10 10:55 AM Contributors Contributors Elmar Altvater was a Professor at the Free University of Berlin from 1970 to 2004. He coedited PROKLA: Zeitschrift für kritische Sozialwissenschaft. He is a member of the Scientific Council of ATTAC Germany, and an associate of the Berlin Institute for International Political Economy. His books include Das Ende des Kapitalismus, wie wir ihn kennen (2005), Grenzen der Globalisierung (with Birgit Mahnkopf) (1999) and The Future of the Market (1993). Baruti Amisi is a visiting scholar in Development Studies at the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s Centre for Civil Society in Durban. His PhD thesis addresses the Inga Hydropower Projects on the Congo River, the world’s largest construction and energy project. He is from the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and a refugee leader in Durban. He has published academic articles on xenophobia, refugee life, the Clean Development Mechanism, and water and sanitation policy. Patrick Bond is Senior Professor of Development Studies at the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban, where he directs the Centre for Civil Society, and also a Professor of Political Economy at Wits University in Johannesburg. His recent books include Elite Transition (2014), South Africa: The Present as Future (with John Saul) (2014) and Politics of Climate Justice (2012). Omar Bonilla Martinez is an Ecuadorian historian. He researches territorial transformation, especially the expansion of extractive frontiers of oil and mining industries. He is a member of the collective Critical Geography of Ecuador and the YASunidos Collective. He has also worked extensively with local communities situated along the proposed Manta–Manaus transport axis. vii Brics layout.indd 7 2015/06/10 10:55 AM BRICS Einar Braathen is Senior Researcher in International Studies at the Norwegian Institute for Urban and Regional Research. For the last years his main work has been on Brazil, and until 2018 he heads the project ‘Insurgent Citizenship in Brazil: the Role of Mega-Sports Events’. Pedro Henrique Campos is Professor of History and International Relations at the Federal Rural University of Rio de Janeiro. His PhD in Social History at the Fluminense Federal University focused on the relationship of construction companies to the Brazilian dictatorships (1964–1988). Ruslan Dzarasov is the Head of the Department of Political Economy at the G.V. Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, and Senior Research Fellow at the Central Institute of Economics and Mathematics within the Russian Academy of Sciences. He has written for the academic journals Debatte: Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe and the Cambridge Journal of Economics. His recent book is The Conundrum of Russian Capitalism (2014). Virginia Fontes is an historian based at the Fluminense Federal University in Rio de Janeiro. Her major works include O Brasil eo capital-imperialismo: teoria e história (2010), A sociedade civil no Brasil contemporâneo: lutas sociais e luta teórica na década de 1980 (2006), Reflexões impertinentes: história e capitalismo contemporâneo (2004), Capitalismo, exclusões e inclusão forçada (1997) and História do Brasil recente: 1964–1992 (1996). Ana Garcia is Professor of International Relations at the Federal Rural University of Rio de Janeiro and an associate of the UKZN Centre for Civil Society and the Institute of Alternative Policies for the Southern Cone of Latin America. Her doctorate was completed at the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro. She co-edited (with Patrick Bond) the special issue of Tensões Mundiais: Perspectivas Críticas Sobre os BRICS (2014). Ho-fung Hung is Associate Professor of Sociology at the Johns Hopkins University. He researches global political economy, protest and nationalism. He is the author of Protest with Chinese Characteristics (2013) and The China Boom: Origins, Global Impacts, and Demise (2015). Richard Kamidza holds a doctorate in Development Studies from the University of KwaZulu-Natal and is a post-doctoral research fellow at North West University. viii Brics layout.indd 8 2015/06/10 10:55 AM Contributors Karina Kato is a Professor in the Department of Development, Agriculture and Society at the Federal Rural University of Rio de Janeiro and an associate of the Institute of Alternative Policies for the Southern Cone of Latin America. Claudio Katz is Professor at the University of Buenos Aires and a researcher with the National Scientific and Technical Research Council of Argentina. His books include Bajo el imperio del capital (2011), Las disyuntivas de la izquierda en América Latina (2008) and El porvenir de socialismo (2004). Mathias Luce is Professor of Latin American History at Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, where he heads the research group on the Economic History of Dependent Capitalism. His writings focus on super-exploitation, sub- imperialism and dependent capitalism. He is co-editor of Padrão de reprodução do capital: contribuições da teoria marxista da dependência (2012). Farai Maguwu is a PhD student at the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s Centre for Civil Society in Durban, and Director of the Centre for Natural Resource Governance in Harare. He is a recipient of the Human Rights Watch Alison Des Forges Award for Extraordinary Activism based on his critique of the Marange diamond looting. Judith Marshall is a Canadian labour educator, writer and global activist. She recently retired after 20 years in the Canadian steelworkers’ union, where she coordinated Steelworkers Humanity Fund projects in southern Africa and organised global exchange programmes linking workers and community organisations affected by transnational mining companies like Vale. Her PhD at the University of Toronto was published as Literacy, Power and Democracy in Mozambique (1993). Gilmar Mascarenhas is Associate Professor in Human Geography at the State University of Rio de Janeiro. Since 2004 he has published several papers and a book about the relations between mega-sports events and host cities, focusing on territorial changes, conflicts and citizenship. Sam Moyo is Professor of Agrarian Studies and Director of the African Institute for Agrarian Studies and Honorary Professor at the University of KwaZulu- Natal’s Centre for Civil Society. He has served as President of the Council for the Development of Social Research in Africa (2009–11); his books include African ix Brics layout.indd 9 2015/06/10 10:55 AM
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