The Structure of Portuguese Society: The Failure of Fascism
By (Author) Diamanti Machado
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th December 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
946.9042
Hardback
240
This macro-historical study sheds light on the "Portuguese Paradox": why a country with a vast and wealthy colonial empire bacame the poorest and most backward of Western European nations. Employing a class conflict perspective, Diamantino P. Machado examines Portugal's Estado Novo and the eventual collapse of the reactionary coalition. He analyzes the important role of the state in Portugal's political economy between 1926 and 1974, offering new insights about the Estado Novok Salazar, the military, and bureaucratic-authoritarian states. Machado focuses on five aspects of Portuguese society: the transiton from latifundia agriculture to industrial oligopoly; the role of the state during the reactionary coalition regime (1926-1974); the African Wars; the changing structure of the Portuguese military officer corps; and the revolution of 1974 and its aftermath. Analyzing the state as a vehicle for class domination, Machado concludes that the reactionary coalition caused Portugal to become the poorest, most underdeveloped country in Western Europe, in part by allowing foreigners and a small Portuguese elite to exploit the country's immense overseas empire. This book should prove valuable to scholars of European history, sociology, comparative politics and political economy.
DIAMANTINO P. MACHADO is Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology at La Salle University. His research specializes in political sociology and the sociology of developing societies. He has also taught at Drexel University, participated in several sociological conferences, and has published an article in Iberian Studies.