BOOKS
Development and the Private Sector: Consuming InterestsDeborah Eade and John Sayer, editors Presenting both analytical chapters and case studies ranging from El Salvador, to Kenya, to Timor-Leste, the authors of Development and the Private Sector explore how the private sector can do less harm, and even do considerable good, by fostering equitable development. More > | ![]() |
Development and Underdevelopment: The Political Economy of Global Inequality, 5th editionMitchell A. Seligson and John T Passé-Smith, editors The fifth edition of this classic reader retains many of the articles that have made the book a must-assign for classes on development and political economy, but has been updated with 14 new chapters that look even more deeply at long-term factors that help to explain the origins and current trends in the gap between rich and poor. An entirely new section focuses on natural resource and More > | ![]() |
Development Brokers and Translators: The Ethnography of Aid and AgenciesDavid Lewis and David Mosse, editors The contributors to Development Brokers and Translators, all anthropologists with practical experience in development work, show how ethnography can be an indispensable tool for understanding the complex and dynamic relationships among communities, ideas, resources, and development agencies. More > | ![]() |
Development Challenges Confronting PakistanAnita M. Weiss and Saba Gul Khattak, editors Although scholars and practitioners have identified explicit structural impediments that constrain countries' efforts to alleviate poverty and promote sustainable social development, there has been limited research conducted to identify the specific barriers to development that prevail in Pakistan today. The authors of Development Challenges Confronting Pakistan go far toward filling this More > | ![]() |
Development Methods and Approaches: Critical ReflectionsDeborah Eade, editor Many aid agencies advocate approaches to development that are people-centered, participatory, empowering, and gender-fair. This volume explores the middle ground between such values-based approaches and the methods and techniques that the agencies adopt. Contributors argue that tools and methods will contribute to a values-based approach only if those using them have a serious commitment to a More > | ![]() |
Development NGOs and Labor Unions: Terms of EngagementDeborah Eade and Alan Leather, editors While NGOs and unions will naturally pursue diverse strategies and tactics, neither sector can afford to go it alone. The authors of Development NGOs and Labor Unions elucidate some of the underlying tensions between the two and illustrate the scope for constructive dialogue—and potential partnership—between them. More > | ![]() |
Development with WomenDeborah Eade, editor Drawn from the contents of the acclaimed journal Development in Practice, this book explores such issues such as "mainstreaming" versus specialization, methodologies for incorporating gender analysis into planning and evaluation, the limitations of gender training, the unintended impacts of women-focused credit programs, and how institutional policies to promote gender equity are often More > | ![]() |
Development, Social Policy, and Community Action: Lessons From BelowLeila Patel and Marianne S. Ulriksen, editors Solutions to poverty and inequality are often designed, implemented, and evaluated in a top-down manner. The authors of this book turn things around, using a range of research approaches to show how social-assistance policies can be crafted to support local communities to effect positive change. Though based on studies conducted in the urban area of Doornkop, South Africa, the work applies equally More > | ![]() |
Diasporas and Development: Exploring the PotentialJennifer M. Brinkerhoff, editor For some time in diaspora studies, attention to remittances has overshadowed the growing impact of emigrant groups both within the social and political arenas in their homelands and with regard to fundamental economic development. The authors of Diasporas and Development redress this imbalance, focusing on three core issues: the responses of diasporas to homeland conflicts, strategies for More > | ![]() |
Different Responses to Violence in Japan and AmericaJohn P.J. Dussich, Paul C. Friday, Takayuki Okada, Akira Yamagami, and Richard D. Knudten |











