Development: Doctrines of developmentA six volume collection of selected contributions on development and related issues such as growth, modernism, ecology, industrialization, democracy, civil society, religions and ethnicity, dating from 1916 to 1998. The collection contains journal articles, reviews and excerpts from books. The volumes are organized under the following subject headings: Volume I: Doctrines of Development: The Invention of Development, The Age of High Modernism: Development as Mimicry, Growth, Development and Welfare, The Development of Underdevelopment, The Counter-Revolution in Development Theory and Policy, Feminism and Development, Post-Colonialism and Post-Development, A New Mainstream? Asymmetric Information, Intitutions and Social Capital. Volume II: The Great Transformation (Part One): The Agrarian Question: Food, Famine, Peasant and Farmers, Political Ecology: Science, Agribusiness and the Environment, The Countryside and the City, Merchants, Markets and Workers. Volume III: TheGreat Transformation (Part Two): The Political Economy of Industrialization, The Global Political Economy I: Trade and Aid, The Global Political Economy II: Money Power and Space. Volume IV: States, Politics andCivil Society: Passive Revolutions, Development States, Soldier States, Violent States, Governance and Democracy, Corruption, Franchised States, NGOs, States, Citizens and Civil Society, Resistance. Volume V: Identities, Representations, Alternatives: Religions, (Re- )presentations, Cities, Consumption, Alternatives. Volume VI: Challenges for Development: Capabilities, Ethics, Sustainability, Regulation. |
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Table des matières
States Politics and Civil Society | 1 |
Regulation 291 | 13 |
The Countryside and the City 335 | 38 |
Representations | 49 |
circa 19501975 C Pletsch | 56 |
Soldier States Violent States | 70 |
Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective | 85 |
Ethics | 93 |
The Limited | 236 |
Corruption | 251 |
Methodology for the Analysis of Concrete Situations | 260 |
The Political Economy of the RentSeeking Society | 335 |
A Retrospective View P Bauer | 353 |
Neoclassical Political Economy the State and Economic | 368 |
Index | 377 |
Women in a Mens World E Boserup | 393 |
The Five StagesofGrowth A Summary W W Rostow | 105 |
Economic Development with Unlimited Supplies | 116 |
Trade and Aid | 117 |
Spread and Impact of the Ideology of Planning G Myrdal | 155 |
Governance and Democracy | 157 |
The Meaning of Development D Seers | 189 |
Sustainability | 191 |
Introduction to Redistribution with Growth H Chenery | 214 |
The Development of Underdevelopment A G Frank | 225 |
Paradigms of Household Economics | 409 |
Doing What Comes Naturally? Women and Environment | 428 |
Economic Development and Moral Development | 461 |
Basta Mexican Indians Say Enough G Esteva | 468 |
The New Development Economics J Stiglitz | 515 |
An Historical | 530 |
Democracy and the Washington Consensus J Williamson | 579 |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Development: Critical Concepts in the Social Sciences, Volume 1 Stuart Corbridge Aucun aperçu disponible - 2000 |
Development: Critical Concepts in the Social Sciences. Doctrines of ... Stuart Corbridge Aucun aperçu disponible - 2000 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
activities Africa agriculture American analysis Arab argued backward banks become capital capitalist century competition concept concerned continued costs countries course created critical cultural dependency discussion economic development effect emergence example existence fact follow force foreign groups growth human idea ideology important income increase India individual industrial institutions interests International investment labour land Latin less limited London means ment natural noted organization Orientalism output period planning policies political poor population position possible practice present problems production profits progress question Reading relations relatively rent reprint result Review rise role sector sense social society Soviet stage structure studies suggests surplus theory Third World three worlds tion trade traditional underdevelopment United University Press wages Western women workers