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      Book

      Recognition and Redistribution
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      Book

      Recognition and Redistribution

      DOI link for Recognition and Redistribution

      Recognition and Redistribution book

      Beyond International Development

      Recognition and Redistribution

      DOI link for Recognition and Redistribution

      Recognition and Redistribution book

      Beyond International Development
      Edited ByHeloise Weber, Mark T. Berger
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2009
      eBook Published 17 June 2019
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315878263
      Pages 202
      eBook ISBN 9781315878263
      Subjects Global Development, Politics & International Relations
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      Weber, H., & Berger, M.T. (Eds.). (2009). Recognition and Redistribution: Beyond International Development (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315878263

      ABSTRACT

      This is an innovative and insightful approach to the global politics of development. The authors challenge conventional perspectives of, and approaches to, development and offer alternative accounts of the politics of development from the perspective of non-state centred and non-state centric approaches. The authors offer critical reinterpretations of historical experiences of development processes and together with insightful analysis of contemporary development strategies this is a genuinely new perspective on the global politics of development. Moreover, in moving beyond more ‘economistic’ approaches to development this book seeks to uncover the complexity of development in ways that account for social relations of power and identity. The authors successfully demonstrate the transdisciplinary nature of the politics of development in their respective engagement with political theory, anthropological and sociological perspectives in ways that provide an overall integrated approach to the politics of recognition and redistribution in development. In contrast to globalisation calling into question the idea and practices of international development, this study situates the question of the politics of the ‘international’ within a broader historical context of global social relations of power and dispossession, and their impact on states, regions and cultures. In framing the project as whole through the concepts of recognition and redistribution, this is a genuine effort to ‘rethink development’. It is timely in an era of global politics and globalisation wherein both issues of identity and struggles over development challenge us to re-rethink disciplinary boundaries.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |5 pages

      Introduction: Beyond International Development

      ByMark T. Berger, Heloise Weber

      chapter |15 pages

      Keeping the World Safe for Primary Colors: Area Studies, Development Studies, International Studies, and the Vicissitudes of Nation-Building

      ByMark T. Berger

      chapter |14 pages

      Social Regulation in the Time of War: Constituting the Current Crisis

      ByShelley Feldman

      chapter |14 pages

      On the Critique of the Subject of Development: Beyond Proprietary and Methodological Individualism

      ByMartin Weber

      chapter |11 pages

      ‘Failed States’ and ‘State Failure’: Threats or Opportunities?

      ByMorten Bøås, Kathleen M. Jennings

      chapter |13 pages

      From the Politics of Development to the Challenges of Globalization

      ByJennifer Bair

      chapter |13 pages

      Taming Corporations or Buttressing Market-Led Development? A Critical Assessment of the Global Compact

      BySusanne Soederberg

      chapter |15 pages

      A Global Knowledge Bank? The World Bank and Bottom-Up Efforts to Reinforce Neoliberal Development Perspectives in the Post-Washington Consensus Era

      ByDieter Plehwe

      chapter |13 pages

      Rethinking the Global Production of Uneven Development

      ByMarcus Taylor

      chapter |15 pages

      Re-Envisioning Global Development: Conceptual and Methodological Issues

      BySandra Halperin

      chapter |14 pages

      A Political Analysis of the Formal Comparative Method: Historicizing the Globalization and Development Debate

      ByHeloise Weber

      chapter |14 pages

      International Political Economy/Development Otherwise

      ByCristina Rojas

      chapter |15 pages

      The Poverty of the Global Order

      ByDia Da Costa, Philip McMichael

      chapter |2 pages

      Conclusion: Towards Recognition and Redistribution in Global Politics

      ByHeloise Weber, Mark T. Berger
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