Katana VentraIP

Third World

The term "Third World" arose during the Cold War to define countries that remained non-aligned with either NATO or the Warsaw Pact. The United States, Canada and their allies represented the "First World", while the Soviet Union, China, Cuba, North Korea, Vietnam, and their allies represented the "Second World". This terminology provided a way of broadly categorizing the nations of the Earth into three groups based on political divisions. Due to the complex history of evolving meanings and contexts, there is no clear or agreed-upon definition of the Third World.[1] Strictly speaking, "Third World" was a political, rather than economic, grouping.[2]

For other uses, see Third World (disambiguation).

Since most Third World countries were economically poor and non-industrialized, it became a stereotype to refer to developing countries as "third-world countries". In political discourse, the term Third World was often associated with being underdeveloped. Some countries in the Eastern Bloc, such as Cuba, were often regarded as Third World. The Third World was normally seen to include many countries with colonial pasts in Africa, Latin America, Oceania, and Asia. It was also sometimes taken as synonymous with countries in the Non-Aligned Movement. In the dependency theory of thinkers like Raúl Prebisch, Walter Rodney, Theotônio dos Santos, and others, the Third World has also been connected to the world-systemic economic division as "periphery" countries dominated by the countries comprising the economic "core".[1]


In the Cold War, some European democracies (Austria, Finland, Ireland, Sweden, and Switzerland) were neutral in the sense of not joining NATO, but were prosperous, never joined the Non-Aligned Movement, and seldom self-identified as part of the Third World.


Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, the term Third World has decreased in use. It is being replaced with terms such as developing countries, least developed countries or the Global South.

Fourth World

Neutral and Non-Aligned European States

(1992). In theory: Classes, nations, literatures. London: Verso Books.

Aijaz, Ahmad

Bauer, Peter T. (1981). . Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674259850.

Equality, the Third World, and economic delusion

Chaouad, Robert. (2016) Emergence: genesis and circulation of a notion that has become a category of analysis, International and Strategic Review, vol. 103, no. 3, pp. 55-66.

(2011). Encountering development: The making and unmaking of the Third World (revised ed.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Escobar, Arturo

Lawrence, Mark Atwood. The End of Ambition: The United States and the Third World in the Vietnam War Era (Princeton University Press, 2021)  978-0-691-12640-1 | Website: rjissf.org online reviews

ISBN

Melkote, Srinivas R. & Steeves, H. Leslie. (1991). Communication for development in the Third World: Theory and practice for Empowerment . New Delhi: SAGE Publications.

Sheppard, Eric & Porter, Wayland P. (1998). A world of difference: Society, nature, development. New York: Guilford Press.

Smith, Brian C. (2013). Understanding Third World Politics: Theories of Political Change and Development (4th ed.). London: .

Palgrave Macmillan

Aijaz, Charles K. (1973). The political economy of development and underdevelopment. New York: .

Random House

Parrott, R. Joseph; Lawrence, Mark Atwood, eds. (2022). . Cambridge Studies in US Foreign Relations. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781009004824. ISBN 978-1-009-00482-4.

The Tricontinental Revolution: Third World Radicalism and the Cold War