Abstract
In the introduction to their edited volume International Development and the
Social Sciences: Essays on the History and Politics of Knowledge, Frederick
Cooper and Randall Packard take on the thorny question of why development
policies change and why they sometimes persist or reappear after a period of
dormancy. Much recent scholarship has located the reasons for persistence
or change in development approaches within international institutions such
as multilateral and bilateral aid agencies and Western scientific and social
scientific disciplines. Both Arturo Escobar and James Ferguson argue for the
existence of a hegemonic development discourse with standardized interventions
aimed at ‘solving’ homogenized ‘problems’. Grounded in Western
institutions such as the World Bank, this development discourse is maintained by
an interlocked network of experts and expertise. In their analyses,
development approaches and interventions are minimally affected by the
particularities of locale. Other scholars concerned with identifying and
understanding significant change in development policy have also focused
their studies on Western organizations and disciplines and excluded from
their analysis the role that development practice might play in change. But
Cooper and Packard challenge scholars to consider the ways in which
development policies might be molded by the practice of development, when
they note ‘it is not clear that the determinants of these policies are as
independent of what goes on at the grassroots as they appear to their authors
or their critics to be’.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
28 articles.
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