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Conference report on global energy policy and economic development issues and options - discusses the role of OPEC in North South dialogue, pricing and production policy, political aspects of petroleum, energy self reliance and related policies of Argentina, Zaire and Thailand; stresses the need for technology transfer, market access, development aid, disarmament, TCDC, energy conservation and alternative energy sources; outlines the role of developed countries. Diagrams and graphs. List of participants. Conference held in Vienna 1981 Nov 24 to 26.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is one of the most recognizable acronyms among international organizations. It is mainly associated with the 'oil shock' of 1973 when prices of petroleum quadrupled and industrialized countries and consumers were forced to face the limits of their development model. This is the first history of OPEC and of its members written by a professional historian. It carries the reader from the formation of the first petrostate in the world, Venezuela in the late 1920s, to the global ascent of petrostates and OPEC during the 1970s, to their crisis in the late-1980s and early- 1990s. Formed in 1960, OPEC was the first international organization of the Global South. It was perceived as acting as the economic 'spearhead' of the Global South and acquired a role that went far beyond the realm of oil politics. Petrostates such as Venezuela, Nigeria, Algeria, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Iran were (and continue to be) key regional actors, and their enduring cooperation, defying wide political and cultural differences and even wars, speaks to the centrality of natural resources in the history of the twentieth century, and to the underlying conflict between producers and consumers of these natural resources.
Vols. for 1975- include publications cataloged by the Research Libraries of the New York Public Library with additional entries from the Library of Congress MARC tapes.
This book discusses the influence of oil on the internal politics of Iran.