Affiliation:
1. Department of Conflict and Development Studies, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
2. International Centre for the History of Universities and Science, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy
Abstract
Since the turn of the millennium, the major development agencies have been promoting “knowledge for development,” “ICT for development,” or the “knowledge economy” as new paradigms to prompt development in less-developed countries. These paradigms display an unconditional trust in the power of Western technology and scientific knowledge to trigger development—they taste of epistemic and technological determinism. This article probes, by means of a genealogy, how and when development cooperation began adhering to epistemic and technological determinism, and which forms this adhesion has taken over time. The genealogy shows, first, that knowledge and technology have always been integrally part of the very “development” idea since this idea was shaped during enlightenment. Second, while the genealogy reveals that epistemic and technological determinism were embedded in the development idea from the very beginning, it also illustrates that the determinism has always been challenged by critical voices.
Subject
Human-Computer Interaction,Economics and Econometrics,Sociology and Political Science,Philosophy,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Anthropology
Cited by
60 articles.
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1. Contents;Sozial- und Kulturgeographie;2024-04-02
2. Frontmatter;Sozial- und Kulturgeographie;2024-04-02
3. References;Sozial- und Kulturgeographie;2024-04-02
4. Chapter 11 Conclusion: Performing Technocapitalism;Sozial- und Kulturgeographie;2024-04-02
5. Part II Conclusion: Technocapitalism's Responsibilization to Calculate and Care (for Liberating Products);Sozial- und Kulturgeographie;2024-04-02