Doing Good or Doing Better
Titel
Doing Good or Doing Better
Subtitel
Development Policies in a Globalising World
Prijs
€ 67,95 excl. BTW
ISBN
9789089641076
Uitvoering
Paperback
Aantal pagina's
378
Taal
Engels
Publicatiedatum
Afmetingen
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Inhoudsopgave
Toon inhoudsopgaveVerberg inhoudsopgave
contents - 6 about the authors - 10 preface - 14 1 towards development policies based onlesson learning: an introduction - 16 1.1 paradigm shifts - 17 1.2 globalization - 20 1.3 at the beginning of the 21st century: elements fordevelopment policies based on lesson learning - 23 2 twenty-first century globalization,paradigm shifts in development - 28 2.1 twenty-first century globalization - 28 2.2 turning points - 30 2.3 new development era - 31 2.4 international development cooperation - 41 3 does foreign aid work? - 48 3.1 introduction - 48 3.2 what aid are we talking about? - 49 3.3 challenges in trying to assess the impact of aid - 52 3.4 does aid work? the evidence - 55 3.5 constraining aid’s greater impact and how theseconstraints might be addressed - 66 3.6 concluding comments: aid and the wider perspective - 71 4 under-explored treasure troves ofdevelopment lessons: lessons from thehistories of small rich european countries - 82 4.1 introduction: lessons from history, or rather the‘secret history’ - 82 4.2 agriculture - 87 4.3 industrial development - 90 4.4 corporate governance and the concentration ofeconomic power - 96 4.5 social and political factors - 98 4.6 concluding remarks - 100 5 stagnation in africa: disentanglingfigures, facts and fiction - 108 5.1 stagnation in sub-saharan africa - 109 5.2 the low social development cause - 112 5.3 the not-a-nation-state cause - 114 5.4 the dependence on raw material exports cause - 116 5.5 the greedy politicians cause - 117 5.6 the weak states and weak policies cause - 119 5.7 the washington consensus cause - 120 5.8 other traps and curses - 124 5.9 conclusions and consequences - 126 6 including the middle classes?latin american social policies after thewashington consensus - 138 6.1 the isi period and the origins of social policy regimes - 139 6.2 the debt crisis and the washington consensus - 140 6.3 neoliberalism and its failures - 141 6.4 turn to the left and basic universalism? - 145 6.5 the role of the middle classes - 149 6.6 lessons for development policy and external support - 151 7 imaginary institutions: state-building inafghanistan - 158 7.1 the afghan state and the dynamics that affect it - 159 7.2 the nature of the state-building effort inafghanistan - 164 7.3 how the ‘international community’ responds - 166 7.4 some concluding remarks - 171 8 beyond development orthodoxy:chinese lessons in pragmatism andinstitutional change - 178 8.1 buried under development? - 178 8.2 on land and institutions - 181 8.3 chinese pragmatism: colored cats or the demise ofideology? - 184 8.4 implications of chinese development: someconcluding observations - 194 9 business and sustainable development:from passive involvement to activepartnerships - 212 9.1 introduction: from uniform to pluriformdevelopment thinking - 212 9.2 from a traditional to a new development paradigm - 214 9.3 from macro to micro: the role of multinationals insustainable development - 217 9.4 from general to specific: strategic management ofcorporations and poverty alleviation - 220 9.5 from passive to active: the search for partnerships - 227 9.6 conclusion: the challenges ahead - 229 10 why ‘philanthrocapitalism’ is notthe answer: private initiatives andinternational development - 238 10.1 private initiatives – what kind and how much? - 240 10.2 ngo initiatives - 242 10.3 institutional philanthropy - 245 10.4 common problems: impact and accountability - 249 10.5 conclusions and implications for development policy - 250 11 the trouble with participation:assessing the new aid paradigm - 256 11.1 participation: on the main menu or just a side dish? - 256 11.2 what the new aid approach sets out to do: somebackground on the failure of ai

Recensies en Artikelen

This volume provides the most comprehensive analysis available of the core issues on the global development agenda. All of the most difficult challenges are addressed - including the problems of development orthodoxy; the potential for corporate, NGO and civil society partnerships; the impact of the rise of China and India on aid, trade and investment; how best to engage in postwar peace and state building - and in each case novel answers provided. Both beginners and veterans in this field will benefit enormously from its insights. Martin Rhodes, Professor and Co-Director, Joseph Korbel School of International Relations, University of Denver, Colorado

Monique Kremer, Robert Went (red.)

Doing Good or Doing Better

Development Policies in a Globalising World

'Goed doen' kan een stuk beter volgens de Wetenschappelijke Raad voor het Regeringsbeleid. Niet armoedebestrijding maar ontwikkeling zou de doelstelling moeten zijn van ontwikkelingssamenwerking. Het ‘beter doen’ betekent bovendien minder moraliseren, bescheidener en pragmatischer interveniëren, minder voorschrijven hoe het moet en maatwerk leveren. Landen moeten hun eigen ontwikkelingspad volgen, niet het onze. Deze verkenning is de opmaat voor het rapport Minder pretentie, meer ambitie.
Redacteuren

Monique Kremer

Monique Kremer is als onderzoeker verbonden aan de Wetenschappelijke Raad voor het Regeringsbeleid (WRR).

Robert Went

Robert Went (twitter: @went1955) is econoom bij de Wetenschappelijke Raad voor het Regeringsbeleid (WRR). Hij werkte daar o.a. mee aan publicaties over ontwikkelingshulp, het Nederlands verdienvermogen, en ongelijkheid. Zie ook: http://www.wrr.nl/en/bureau/staf/article/robert-went/