ABSTRACT

When aid to the Third World actually works it is usually on such a small scale that it makes little impact on the world's problems. Can demands for generalizable actions be reconciled with location-specific solutions? The Critical Villager considers how community-based technical aid can be made more effective and sustainable. Calling for development workers, policy makers and researchers to put themselves in the place of the intended beneficiaries of aid, it suggests concrete principles for action and research. It argues that participatory research and 'transfer of technology' should not be regarded as rival models for development but rather as complementary components in a single process of effective aid.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

part I|53 pages

Reasonable

chapter 1|20 pages

The Big Idea

chapter 2|16 pages

Recognized Authorities

chapter 3|15 pages

Maximum Serendipity

part II|39 pages

Recognizable

chapter 4|12 pages

Tangible Entities

chapter 5|25 pages

Clear Visual Messages

part III|48 pages

Respectable

chapter 6|18 pages

Modern Imagery

chapter 7|10 pages

Influential People

chapter 8|18 pages

Multiple Agendas

chapter |11 pages

Conclusions