Cart
Free Shipping in Australia
Proud to be B-Corp

The Post-Development Reader Majid Rahnema

The Post-Development Reader By Majid Rahnema

The Post-Development Reader by Majid Rahnema


$22,49
Condition - Very Good
Only 2 left

Summary

This reader brings together thinking on development by scholars, practitioners and activists from both North and South. They provide a critique of what the mainstream paradigm has in practice done to the peoples of the world and to their richly diverse and sustainable ways of living.

The Post-Development Reader Summary

The Post-Development Reader by Majid Rahnema

With the collapse of colonialism, the millions who had joined the struggle accepted their leaders' new call for 'development'. Little today remains of that enthusiasm. The question they now ask is: can anything be done to stop the process and regenerate the forces needed to bring about change more in accordance with their own aspirations? This reader brings together an exceptionally gifted group of thinkers and activists - from South and North - who have long pondered these questions. Diverse in background and experience, they are all committed, however, to seeing through the rhetoric of development, free from the distorting lenses of ideology and habit. They are also interested in looking at 'the other side of the story', particularly from the perspective of the 'losers'. It is these orientations which make this reader such an original compilation. The contributors illuminate the wisdom of vernacular society which modern development thinking and practice has done so much to denigrate and destroy. They deliver devastating critiques of the dominant development paradigm and what it has done to the peoples of the world and their richly diverse and sustainable ways of living. Most importantly, in terms of the future, they present some of the experiences and ideals out of which ordinary people are now trying to construct their own more humane and culturally and ecologically respectful alternatives to development, which, in turn, may provide useful signposts for those concerned with the post-development era that is now at hand.

The Post-Development Reader Reviews

'A monument to the vigour of commonsense in resisting the belief that progress can be likened to a law of nature. This book is a primer for reflection on the fertile potential of the loss of 20th century certainties.' Ivan Illich

About Majid Rahnema

Majid Rahnema (1924 - 14 April 2015) was a diplomat and former government minister in Iran.

Victoria Bawtree is a member of The World is Not for Sale collective.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction - Majid Rahnema
  • Part I: The Vernacular World
    • 1. The Original Affluent Society - Marshall Sahlins
    • 2. Learning from Ladakh - Helena Norberg-Hodge
    • 3. The Economy and Symbolic Sites of Africa - Hassan Zaoual
    • 4. Our Responsibility to the Seventh Generation - Linda Clarkson, Vern Morrissette and Gabriel Regallet
    • 5. The Sprial of the Ram's Horn: Boran Concepts of Development - Gudrun Dahl and Gemetchu Megerssa
  • Part II: The Development Paradigm
    • 6. The Idea of Progress - Teodor Shanin
    • 7. Faust, The First Developer - Marshall Berman
    • 8. The Making and Unmaking of the Third World through Development - Arturo Escobar
    • 9. Development as Planned poverty - Ivan Illich
    • 10. Twenty-six Years Later - Ivan Illich in conversation with Majid Rahnema
    • 11. Development and the People's Immune System: The Story of Another Variety of AIDS - Majid Rahnema
  • Part III: The Vehicles of Development
    • 12. Paradoxical Growth - Serge Latouche
    • 13. The Agony of the Modern State - Rajni Kothari
    • 14. Education as an Instrument of Cultural Defoliation: A Multi-Voice Report - Joseph Ki-Zerbo, Cheikh Hamidou Kane, Jo-Ann Archibald, Edouard Lizop and Majid Rahnema
    • 15. Western Science and Its Destruction of Local Knowledge - Vandana Shiva
    • 16. Colonization of the Mind - Ashis Nandy
    • 17. The One and Only Way of Thinking - Ignacio Ramonet
    • 18. The New Cultural Domination by the Media - James Petras
    • 19. How the United Nations Promotes Development through Technical Assistance
  • Part IV: Development in Practice
    • 20. How the Poor Develop the Rich - Susan George
    • 21. To Be Like Them - Eduardo Galeano
    • 22. Development and the Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho - James Ferguson
    • 23. Transmigration in Indonesia: How Millions Are Uprooted - Graham Hancock
    • 24. 'Women in Development': A Threat to Liberation - Pan Simmons
    • 25. Tehri: A Catastrophic Dam inthe Himalayas - Peter Bunyard
    • 26. The Development Game - Leonard Frank
  • Part V: Towards the Post-Development Age
    • 27. From Global Thinking to Local Thinking - Gustavo Esteva and Madhu Suri Prakash
    • 28. The Need for the Home Perspective - Wolfgang Sachs
    • 29. Basta! Mexican Indians Say 'Enough!' - Gustavo Esteva
    • 30. The Quest for Simplicity - 'My Idea of Swaraj' - Mahatma Gandhi
    • 31. The Searchers after the Simple Life - David E. Shi
    • 32. The infrapolitics of Subordinate Groups - James C. Scott
    • 33. Alternatives from an indian Grassroots Perspective - D. L. Sheth
    • 34. The Power of the Powerless: Citizens against the State in Central Eastern Europe - Vaclac Havel
    • 35. Protecting the Space Within - Karen Lehman
    • 36. Birth of the Inclusion Society - Judith A. Snow
    • 37. Reinventing the Present: The Chodack Experience in Senegal - EmmanuelSeni N'Dione, Philippe de Leener, Jean-Pierre Perier, Mamadou Ndiaye and Pierre Jacolin
  • Afterword: Towards Post-Development: Searching for Signposts,a New Language and New Paradigms - Majid Rahnema
  • Suggested Readings
  • List of Boxes
  • Index

Additional information

GOR001685000
9781856494748
1856494748
The Post-Development Reader by Majid Rahnema
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
19970301
464
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - The Post-Development Reader