community
directory
books
authors
images
encyclopedia

Email:
Password:
Register

Knowledgerush Search

 

Google
  Web knowledgerush


Search for images of Third World


Message boards   Post comment

Third World

The third world is the group of "underdeveloped" countries of the world. They are also known as the Global South, developing countries, and least developed countries in academic circles.

Many of these are located in Africa, Latin America, and Asia. They are often nations that were colonized by another nation in the past. The populations of third world countries are generally very poor but with high birth rates. In general they are not as industrialized or technologically advanced as the first world. The majority of the countries in the world fit this classification.

The term was coined by economist Alfred Sauvy in an article in the French magazine The Observer of August 14, 1952. It was a deliberate reference to the 'Third Estate' of the French Revolution. Tiers monde means third world in French. The term gained widespread popularity during the Cold War when many poorer nations adopted the category to describe themselves as neither being aligned with NATO or the USSR, but instead composing a non-aligned "third world."

Leading members of this original "third world" movement were Yugoslavia, Indonesia, and Egypt. Many third world countries believed they could successfully court both the communist and capitalist nations of the world, and develop key economic partnerships without necessarily falling under their direct influence. In practice, this plan did not work out quite so well; many third world nations were exploited or undermined by the two superpowers who feared these supposedly neutral nations were in danger of falling into alignment with the enemy.

When the Cold War ended and the Soviet Union collapsed, the third world found itself suddenly no longer relevant to much of the world. All across the globe, many third world regimes that had stayed in power by playing one side against the other in the Cold War quickly crumbled from lack of support. In some situations corrupt dictatorships were removed, democracy was introduced, and the nations were able to make significant economic progress, creating several newly industrializing countries. In other cases the corrupt, outdated regimes remained, and their people soon became poorer than ever.

The dependency theory suggests that multinational corporations, the legacy of colonialism, and organizations such as the IMF and World Bank have contributed to third world countries relying on first world countries for economic survival. The theory posits that this dependence is self-maintaining because the economic systems tend to benefit first world countries and multinationals. Scholars also question whether the idea of development is biased in favor of Western thought. They debate whether population growth is a main source of problems in the third world or if the problems are more complex and thorny than that. Policy makers disagree on how much involvement first world countries should have in the third world and whether third world debts should be canceled.

The issues are complicated by the stereotypes of what third world and first world countries are like. People in the first world, for example, often desribe third world countries as underdeveloped, overpopulated, and oppressed by their lack of capitalist representative democracy. Third world people are sometimes portrayed as uneducated, helpless, or backwards. Modern scholarship has taken steps to make academic discourse more conscious of the differences not only between the first world and the third world, but differences among the countries and people of each category.

See also: First World, colonization, neocolonialism.

Referenced By

1980s in music | AIDS in Africa | Absentee landlord | Bandung Conference | BattleTech:Inner Sphere | Brunei | Brunei/Economy | Brunei Darussalam | Bruno Kreisky | Cameroon/Transnational issues | China under Mao | Clock work | Clock works | Clockwork | Clockworks | Cold War:Part 2 | Cold War:Part 3 | Cold War (1953-1962) | Cold War (1962-1991) | Communications in Egypt | Communist state | Communist states | Consumer rights | Debt relief | Declaration of independance | Declaration of independence | Disadvantaged | Doris Lessing | Economy of Brunei | Economy of Earth | Economy of the Soviet Union | Egypt/Communications | End of cold war | First World | Foreign relations of Cameroon | Foreign relations of Libya | Foreign relations of Senegal | Foreign relations of Singapore | Getulio Dorneles Vargas | Getulio Dornelles Vargas | Getulio Vargas | Getúlio Dornelles Vargas | Getúlio Vargas | Gétulio Vargas | HIV-positive | HIV virus | Habitat for Humanity | Hallstein Doctrine | History of the PRC (1949-1976) | History of the People's Republic of China (1949-1976) | History of the Soviet Union: Part II | History of the Soviet Union (1953-1985) | History of the United States (1945-1964) | History of the United States (1964-1980) | History of the United States (1964-present) | History of the United States (1980-1988) | History of the United States (1980-present) | History of the world | Human Immunodeficiency Virus | ISO 3166-1:BN | ISO 3166-1:NR | ISO 3166-1:RU | Inner Sphere | International Socialists (UK) | Iowa: Living in the Third World | Jamaican music | James Tobin | Jewish Task Force | Korea War | Korean Conflict | Korean War | Land reform | Lee Kuan Yew | Lee Kwan-Yew | Libya/Transnational issues | List of famous The New Republic contributors | Mae Carol Jemison | Mae Jemison | Maoism | Maoist | Maoists | Marshall Aid | Marshall Plan | Massive Attack | Mercator Projection | Michael D Higgins | Michel Pablo | Michel Raptis | Music of Jamaica | Nauru | Neo-conservative | Neoconservatism (United States) | Pablo | Pabloism | Peace Corps | Periphery | Pleasant Island | Porter (carrying) | Porter (work) | Robert Gabriel Mugabe ...

 

Compose Your Message

Your Email Address or Pen Name (optional):
Subject:
Your Message:
 

 

 

 

 

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Third World".

 

Contact UsPrivacy Statement & Terms of Use

 
Copyright © 1999-2003 Knowledgerush.com. All rights reserved.