Broke But Unbroken Chapter Summary

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Augusta Dwyer, a journalist strongly decribes the struggle, and despair that occur in third world countries. He book is based on breaking chains in poverty in a effective and more governmental situated way, that just added democracy to its part. He book decribes four social movements, which are the following; the Landless Rural Workers Movement (MST) in Brazil, the Peasant Union of Indonesia (SPI), the Indian Alliance, and Argentina’s National Movement of Factories Recovered by Workers (MNFRT). The title term “broke but unbroken” provides the meaning of what the book structures out to be: identifying the intersections of hopelessness and hope where grassroots social movements concentrate their efforts on diminishing poverty in a more sustainable and effective way than governments or aid institutions. A major theme throughout the book is how the …show more content…

Droughts, cultivation has been even more difficult because of lack of water, land erosion, loss of demographic explosion and topsoil. Lake Chad has even disappeared. This is the consequence when government has no care for its people and when a country lets other influence them or take over and make changes for the worst. Neo-Liberalism on the other hand affects its citizens of Africa by charging for things they shouldn’t charge for. They have charged high cost for oil that yet that they don’t even have much but yet have to pay a pretty penny for. It’s like asking permission to the government of the economy to grow crops, breathe and live. The SAP World Bank would charge for health care or charge a fee for it, it would also charge for water services and education fees. Example, here on how outside commodities are trying to take advantage of the poor class or those countries that truly cannot affords the extra bill or don’t have the means to even feed their own. They don’t have wheat to even made bread from or

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