ABSTRACT

This book proposes a new theoretical framework for agency thinking by examining the ethical, discursive and practical engagements of a group of women development workers in north-west India with developmentalism and individual rights.

Rethinking Agency asks an underexplored question, tracks the entry, encounter, experience and practice of developmentalism and individual rights, and examines their normative and political trajectory. Through an ethnography of a moral encounter with developmentalism, it raises a critical question: how do we think of agency in oppressive contexts? Further, how do issues of risk, injury, coercion and oppression alter the conceptual mechanics of agency itself?

The work will be invaluable to research organisations, development practitioners, policy makers and political journalists interested in questions of gender, political empowerment, rights and political participation, and to academics and students in the fields of feminist theory, development studies, sociology, politics and gender studies.

chapter |35 pages

Developmentalism, Agency and Rights

An Introduction

chapter |33 pages

Action, Agency, Oppression

Reformatting Agency for Oppressive Contexts

chapter |51 pages

Producing Subjects and Subjectivities for Development

The Women's Development Programme, Rajasthan

chapter |37 pages

Political Rights and Developmentalism

Three Self-Representations

chapter |4 pages

Afterword