ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of Development Ethics provides readers with insight into the central questions of development ethics, the main approaches to answering them, and areas for future research. Over the past seventy years, it has been argued and increasingly accepted that worthwhile development cannot be reduced to economic growth. Rather, a number of other goals must be realised:

  • Enhancement of people's well-being
  • Equitable sharing in benefits of development
  • Empowerment to participate freely in development
  • Environmental sustainability
  • Promotion of human rights
  • Promotion of cultural freedom, consistent with human rights
  • Responsible conduct, including integrity over corruption

Agreement that these are essential goals has also been accompanied by disagreements about how to conceptualize or apply them in different cases or contexts. Using these seven goals as an organizing principle, this handbook presents different approaches to achieving each one, drawing on academic literature, policy documents and practitioner experience.

This international and multi-disciplinary handbook will be of great interest to development policy makers and program workers, students and scholars in development studies, public policy, international studies, applied ethics and other related disciplines.

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

What is development ethics?
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part I|37 pages

Contexts

chapter 2|12 pages

Global ethics

Development ethics as global ethics
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chapter 3|6 pages

Integral human development

Development of every person and of the whole person
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chapter 4|6 pages

Post-development

No development is good development
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chapter 5|11 pages

Epistemology

Epistemic injustice and distortion in development theory and practice
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part II|48 pages

Well-being

chapter 6|13 pages

Well-being

Happiness, desires, goods, and needs
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chapter 7|16 pages

The capability approach

Ethics and socio-economic development
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chapter 8|9 pages

Happiness

Using subjective well-being metrics to gauge development
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chapter 9|8 pages

Adaptive preferences

Accounting for deflated expectations
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part III|68 pages

Social and global justice

chapter 10|13 pages

Social and global justice

Models of development and theories of justice
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chapter 11|18 pages

Gender

Feminist insights on inequality in development
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chapter 12|14 pages

Indigenous peoples

Self-determination, decolonization, and indigenous philosophies
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chapter 13|8 pages

Horizontal inequalities

Individual capabilities and inequalities between groups
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chapter 14|6 pages

Children

Intergenerational transmission of poverty and inequality
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chapter 15|7 pages

Health

Social gradients and unjust health outcomes
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part IV|37 pages

Empowerment and agency

chapter 16|12 pages

Empowerment

Participatory development and the problem of cooptation
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chapter 17|5 pages

Agency

Expanding choice through democratic processes
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chapter 18|12 pages

Education

Worthwhile education for ethical human development
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chapter 19|6 pages

Displacement

Land acquisition and disempowerment
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part V|41 pages

Environmental sustainability

chapter 20|17 pages

Sustainability and climate change

Human development and human responsibilities
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chapter 21|8 pages

Food production

Food security and agricultural development
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chapter 22|14 pages

Buen vivir and the rights of nature

Alternative visions of development
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part VI|48 pages

Human rights

chapter 23|15 pages

Human rights

Shaping development ethics, pragmatics, law, policy and politics
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chapter 24|15 pages

The right to development

Ethical development as a human right
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chapter 25|16 pages

Security

Building security through peace and reconciliation
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part VII|34 pages

Cultural freedom

chapter 26|11 pages

Cultural freedom

Worthwhile development for a diverse world
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chapter 27|10 pages

LGBTI people

“Being LGBTI” in international development
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chapter 28|11 pages

Religion

Religious contributions to development issues
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part VIII|36 pages

Responsibility

chapter 29|13 pages

International responsibilities

From utility and humanitarianism to global justice
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chapter 30|7 pages

Development practitioners

Absent in the deliberative discourse on development ethics
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chapter 31|14 pages

Corruption

Concepts, costs, causes and challenges
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part IX|57 pages

Regional perspectives

chapter 32|7 pages

Latin America

Inequality provoking critical thought
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chapter 33|6 pages

South Asia

Environmental concerns and human rights violations
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chapter 34|5 pages

East Asia

Challenges to political rights
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chapter 35|7 pages

Middle East and North Africa

The Arab Spring as a political expression of ethical issues
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chapter 36|7 pages

French-speaking sub-Saharan Africa

From buying and selling loyalty to demanding democracy
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chapter 37|6 pages

Sub-Saharan Africa

Development ethics and post-colonial debate
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chapter 38|9 pages

Europe

European development ethics – past and present
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chapter 39|8 pages

USA and Canada

High-income maldevelopment
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