ABSTRACT

Recent critiques of international development practice, affecting aid organizations such as Oxfam, Action Aid and the Red Cross, have attacked the motives of those heading the 'machine' of development suggesting that it is in reality just too politically complex for good ever to come of it. But, despite the genuine need for a critical appraisal of development work, the anti-development backlash would appear to result in a moral dilemma. Should we try to help countries and people in need, or refuse potentially corrupt or harmful involvement?
This book comments on how international development might once again become a visionary project. With perspectives from workers in the development industry, it draws lessons from actual projects to propose a theory of 'emergent ethics': that local moral responses to specific projects must form the basis of a way forward.

part |2 pages

PART I Evolving a new approach

chapter 1|38 pages

Interventions in development

Towards a new moral understanding of our experiences and an agenda for the future

part |2 pages

PART II Coping with ethical challenges

chapter 3|25 pages

The Icarus effect: the rise and fall of development optimisms in a regional development project in Luwu District, South Sulawesi, Indonesia PHILIP Q UA RLES VA N UFFORD AND DIK RO T H

The rise and fall of development optimisms in a regional development project in Luwu District, South Sulawesi, Indonesia

chapter 5|19 pages

Tapping the bell at governance temple

Project implementation in Sarawak as moral narrative

part |2 pages

Part III Coping with different kinds of knowledge

chapter 7|16 pages

Charges and counter-charges of ethical imperialism

Towards a situated approach to development ethics

chapter 8|25 pages

Social science intervention

Moral versus political economy and the Vietnam War

chapter 9|27 pages

Anecdotes, situations, histories

Varieties and uses of cases in thinking about ethics and development practice

chapter 11|19 pages

What are we in fieldwork for?

chapter 12|26 pages

Reconstituting development as a shared responsibility

Ethics, aesthetics and a creative shaping of human possibilities

chapter 13|23 pages

Afterword

The calling of global responsibilities