ABSTRACT

In recent years, much mainstream development discourse has sought to co-opt and neutralize key concepts relating to empowerment, participation, gender, sustainability and inclusivity in order to serve a market-driven, neoliberal agenda. Critical development studies now play a crucial role in combatting this by analyzing the systemic changes needed to transform the current world to one where economic and social justice and environmental integrity prevail.
The Essential Guide to Critical Development Studies takes as its starting point the multiple crises – economic, political, social and environmental – of the dominant current global capitalist system. The chapters collectively document and analyze these crises and the need to find alternatives to the system(s) that generate them. To do so, analyses of class, gender and empire are placed at the centre of discussion, in contrast to markets, liberalization and convergence, which characterize mainstream development discourse. Each contributor supplements their overview with a guide to the critical development studies literature on the topic, thereby providing scholars and students not only with a precis of the key issues, but also a signpost to further readings.
This is an important resource for academics, researchers, policymakers and professionals in the areas of development studies, political science, sociology, economics, gender studies, history, anthropology, agrarian studies, international relations and international political economy.

chapter |27 pages

Critical development studies

An introduction

part I|19 pages

Reflections on history

part II|106 pages

Thinking critically about development

chapter 2|10 pages

Critical development theory

Results and prospects

chapter 4|11 pages

Development theory

The Latin American pivot

chapter 6|13 pages

Development in question

The feminist perspective

part III|57 pages

Capitalism, imperialism and globalization

part IV|38 pages

Poverty, inequalities and development dynamics

chapter 13|10 pages

Poverty analysis through a gender lens

A brief history of feminist contributions in international development 1

chapter 14|14 pages

Gender inequalities at work

Explanations with examples from Cambodia, the Philippines and China

part V|46 pages

Policy configurations for development

chapter 17|10 pages

The developmental state and late industrialization

Still feasible? And desirable?

part VI|39 pages

Class and development

part VII|49 pages

Agrarian change and spatial reconfigurationsxs

part VIII|43 pages

Resources, energy and the environment

part IX|31 pages

The BRICS as the new ‘development giants’

chapter 31|10 pages

Brazil

From the margins to the centre?

chapter 32|9 pages

India

Critical issues of a ‘tortuous transition’

part X|45 pages

The search for a new model

chapter 34|9 pages

Rethinking Latin America

Towards new development paradigms

chapter 36|16 pages

Socialism and development

A Latin American perspective

chapter 37|9 pages

Confronting the capitalist hydra

The Zapatistas reflect on the storm that is upon us 1