dc.contributor.editor | Kremer, Monique | de |
dc.contributor.editor | Lieshout, Peter van | de |
dc.contributor.editor | Went, Robert | de |
dc.date.accessioned | 2011-11-21T16:04:00Z | de |
dc.date.accessioned | 2012-08-29T22:46:55Z | |
dc.date.available | 2012-08-29T22:46:55Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2009 | de |
dc.identifier.isbn | 978-90-8964-107-6 | de |
dc.identifier.uri | http://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/27149 | |
dc.description.abstract | The world is changing, and so is the unquestioning belief that development policies are always right. Instead of focusing on the rather limited notion of poverty, this book aims to deepen our understanding of the broad issue of development. What are the drivers of development? What new issues have arisen due to globalization? And what kind of policies contribute to development in a world that is changing rapidly? The articles in this book provide insight into the muddled trajectories of development on various continents and rethink the notion of development in a globalizing, interdependent world. Taken together, the still fuzzy contours of a paradigm shift emerge from the 'Washington Confusion'. Development can no longer be the ambitious, moral project based on a standard model of economic European or American modernization. 'Doing better' means being less moralistic, more modest and pragmatic, and taking seriously the path dependencies and social realities that exist in each country. | en |
dc.description.tableofcontents | 1 Towards Development Policies Based on Lesson Learning: An Introduction / Monique Kremer, Peter van Lieshout and Robert Went
1.1 Paradigm shifts
1.2 Globalization
1.3 At the beginning of the 21st century: Elements for development policies based on lesson learning
2 Twenty-first Century Globalization, Paradigm Shifts in Development / Jan Nederveen Pieterse
2.1 Twenty-first century globalization
2.2 Turning points
2.3 New development era
2.4 International development cooperation
3 Does Foreign Aid Work? / Roger C. Riddell
3.1 Introduction
3.2 What aid are we talking about?
3.3 Challenges in trying to assess the impact of aid
3.4 Does aid work? The evidence
3.5 Constraining aid’s greater impact and how these constraints might be addressed
3.6 Concluding comments: Aid and the wider perspective
PART II LEARNING FROM DEVELOPMENT HISTORIES
4 Under-explored Treasure Troves of Development Lessons: Lessons from the Histories of Small Rich European Countries / Ha-Joon Chang
4.1 Introduction: Lessons from history, or rather the ‘Secret History’
4.2 Agriculture
4.3 Industrial development
4.4 Corporate governance and the concentration of economic power
4.5 Social and political factors
4.6 Concluding remarks
5 Stagnation in Africa: Disentangling Figures, Facts and Fiction / Paul Hoebink
5.1 Stagnation in sub-Saharan Africa
5.2 The low social development cause
5.3 The not-a-nation-state cause
5.4 The dependence on raw material exports cause
5.5 The greedy politicians cause
5.6 The weak states and weak policies cause
5.7 The Washington consensus cause
5.8 Other traps and curses
5.9 Conclusions and consequences
6 Including the Middle Classes? Latin American Social Policies after the Washington Consensus / Evelyne Huber
6.1 The isi period and the origins of social policy regimes
6.2 The debt crisis and the Washington consensus
6.3 Neoliberalism and its failures
6.4 Turn to the left and basic universalism?
6.5 The role of the middle classes
6.6 Lessons for development policy and external support
7 Imaginary Institutions: State-Building in Afghanistan / Martine van Bijlert
7.1 The Afghan state and the dynamics that affect it
7.2 The nature of the state-building effort in Afghanistan
7.3 How the ‘international community’ responds
7.4 Some concluding remarks
8 Beyond Development Orthodoxy: Chinese Lessons in Pragmatism and Institutional Change / Peter Ho
8.1 Buried under development?
8.2 On land and institutions
8.3 Chinese pragmatism: Colored cats or the demise of ideology?
8.4 Implications of Chinese development: Some concluding observations
PART III BEYOND THE STATE: NEW ACTORS IN DEVELOPMENT
9 Business and Sustainable Development: From Passive Involvement to Active Partnerships / Rob van Tulder and Fabienne Fortanier
9.1 Introduction: from uniform to pluriform development thinking
9.2 From a traditional to a new development paradigm
9.3 From macro to micro: the role of multinationals in sustainable development
9.4 From general to specific: Strategic management of corporations and poverty alleviation
9.5 From passive to active: The search for partnerships
9.6 Conclusion: The challenges ahead
10 Why ‘Philanthrocapitalism’ Is Not the Answer: Private Initiatives and International Development / Michael Edwards
10.1 Private initiatives – what kind and how much?
10.2 ngo initiatives
10.3 Institutional philanthropy
10.4 Common problems: impact and accountability
10.5 Conclusions and implications for development policy
11 The Trouble with Participation: Assessing the New Aid Paradigm / Nadia Molenaers and Robrecht Renard
11.1 Participation: on the main menu or just a side dish?
11.2 What the new aid approach sets out to do: some background on the failure of aid
11.3 Flawed results
11.4 An overly optimistic notion of civil society
11.5 A biased vision on state-society interactions
11.6 A conditionality without ownership
11.7 When less is more
PART IV NEW INTERDEPENDENTIES
12 How Can Sub-Saharan Africa Turn the China-India Threat into an Opportunity? / Raphael Kaplinsky
12.1 Introduction
12.2 Development trajectories for Sub-Saharan Africa – three orthodoxies
12.3 The rise of the Asian Driver economies and their challenge to the three orthodoxies
12.4 The Asian Drivers and Sub-Saharan Africa – win-win or win-lose?
12.5 The policy response
12.6 Policy actors
13 Post-war Peace-building: What Role for International Organizations? / Chris van der Borgh
13.1 Introduction
13.2 Recipes for peace?
13.3 International capacity and coordination
13.4 Local capacity and international footprint
13.5 Conclusion
14 Migration and Development: Contested Consequences / Ronald Skeldon
14.1 Background
14.2 Conceptual issues
14.3 Patterns of migration
14.4 Approaches to migration and development
14.5 Conclusion
15 Global Justice and the State / Pieter Pekelharing
15.1 The rise of the concern for global justice
15.2 The birth of the notion of distributive justice
15.3 Balancing our loyalties. On the extension of justice into the international realm
15.4 It’s not ‘what can you do?’ but ‘what can your institutions do?’
15.5 From cosmopolitanism back to the state: Rawls and the Law of Peoples | en |
dc.language | en | de |
dc.publisher | Amsterdam Univ. Press | de |
dc.subject.ddc | Internationale Beziehungen | de |
dc.subject.ddc | International relations | en |
dc.title | Doing good or going better: development policies in a globalising world | en |
dc.description.review | begutachtet (peer reviewed) | de |
dc.description.review | peer reviewed | en |
dc.identifier.url | http://www.oapen.org/record/340016 | de |
dc.source.volume | 21 | de |
dc.publisher.country | NLD | |
dc.publisher.city | Amsterdam | de |
dc.source.series | WRR Verkenningen | de |
dc.subject.classoz | International Relations, International Politics, Foreign Affairs, Development Policy | en |
dc.subject.classoz | internationale Beziehungen, Entwicklungspolitik | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | Finanzhilfe | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | nachhaltige Entwicklung | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | Akteur | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | Migration | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | Handel | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | development policy | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | Globalisierung | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | 21. Jahrhundert | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | twenty-first century | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | Entwicklungshilfe | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | Kooperation | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | financial assistance | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | globalization | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | social actor | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | Entwicklungspolitik | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | commerce | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | Entwicklungsland | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | Entwicklungshilfepolitik | de |
dc.subject.thesoz | development aid | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | migration | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | sustainable development | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | development aid policy | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | cooperation | en |
dc.subject.thesoz | developing country | en |
dc.identifier.urn | urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-271490 | de |
dc.date.modified | 2012-08-22T11:27:00Z | de |
dc.rights.licence | Creative Commons - Namensnennung, Nicht kommerz., Keine Bearbeitung | de |
dc.rights.licence | Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works | en |
ssoar.greylit | f | de |
ssoar.gesis.collection | SOLIS;ADIS | de |
ssoar.contributor.institution | OAPEN | de |
internal.status | 3 | de |
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dc.type.stock | collection | de |
dc.type.document | Sammelwerk | de |
dc.type.document | collection | en |
dc.rights.copyright | f | de |
dc.source.pageinfo | 378 | |
internal.identifier.classoz | 10505 | |
internal.identifier.document | 24 | |
dc.contributor.corporateeditor | The Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy (WRR) | de |
internal.identifier.ddc | 327 | |
dc.description.pubstatus | Published Version | en |
dc.description.pubstatus | Veröffentlichungsversion | de |
internal.identifier.licence | 2 | |
internal.identifier.pubstatus | 1 | |
internal.identifier.review | 1 | |
internal.identifier.series | 594 | de |
internal.check.abstractlanguageharmonizer | CERTAIN | |
internal.check.languageharmonizer | CERTAIN_RETAINED | |