Anthropology and Development: Culture, Morality and Politics in a Globalised World
Cambridge University Press, 10/18/2012
EAN 9780521184724, ISBN10: 052118472X
Paperback, 270 pages, 24.4 x 17 x 1.5 cm
Language: English
In recent decades international development has grown into a world-shaping industry. But how do aid agencies work and what do they achieve? How does aid appear to the adults and children who receive it? And why has there been so little improvement in the position of the poor? Viewing aid and development from anthropological perspectives gives illuminating answers to questions such as these. This essential textbook reveals anthropologists' often surprising findings and details ethnographic case studies on the cultures of development. The authors use a fertile literature to examine the socio-political organisation of aid communities, agencies and networks, as well as the judgements they make about each other. The everyday practice of development work is about negotiating power and culture, but in vastly different ways in different contexts and for different social groups. Exploring the spaces between policy and practice, success and failure, the future and the past, this book provides a rounded understanding of development work that suggests new moral and political possibilities for an increasingly globalised world.
1. Introduction
hope and despair
2. Anthropologists engaged
3. The social and political organisation of aid and development
4. The elusive poor
5. Human rights and cultural fantasies
6. Hierarchies of knowledge
7. The moralities of production and exchange
8. The politics of policy and practice
9. Imagining the future
Appendix 1. Challenging questions arising from this book.
Advance praise: '[A] lucid and well balanced text that brings anthropological insights to bear on development in an engaging way. It equips the reader to appreciate why bringing about the improvement of the world is no simple matter, and why the analysis of processes, powers, practices, and diverse points of view - the subject matter of anthropology - just cannot be avoided. Bravo!' Tania Li, University of Toronto