Abstract

This paper presents a brief argument for the use of radical analysis to understand problems of national regional policy. The argument is made at three levels, beginning with a distinction between technical, liberal and radical definitions and approaches to the problem of regional planning, continuing with an application of the radical approach to very broad issues of regional policy in two particular cases — the development of Peru and the lagging region problem in Western Europe — and finishing with a more detailed view of a particular project in Mexico.

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