Description

Book Synopsis
Elgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world’s leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas.



This stimulating and accessible Advanced Introduction critically engages with dominant, modernist, and ahistorical narratives of development, foregrounding the overlooked dissonant discourses that are largely written out of mainstream development. It argues that development discourse and practice must remain aware of how historically unequal relations continue to be reproduced today and outlines a range of effective strategies for guiding change towards achieving global social justice.



Features include:


  • challenges to the claims of universality evident in much development scholarship

  • exposure of critical discourses overlooked by conventional development histories

  • identification of progressive ways to guide change towards achieving global social justice

  • guidance on development approaches and ideas that avoid reproducing colonial forms of representation, knowledge, power, and control

  • the foregrounding of critical postcolonial, decolonial, and feminist perspectives to identify how progressive possibilities for change can emerge.



This insightful Advanced Introduction will be beneficial to students and scholars of development studies, geography, sociology, anthropology, history, and indigenous studies seeking an understanding of unequal global relations, knowledge production, and the exercise of global power and control. Further, it will be of great value to academics and students interested in postcolonialism, contemporary colonial legacies, and processes of decolonisation and decoloniality.



Trade Review
‘Insisting on how much and little has changed, this book dwells simultaneously in the past, present, and future of development discourse and practice. The immediacy and longevity of the insights it provides are devastating and liberatory. Read it and respond.’ -- Lisa Palmer, University of Melbourne, Australia
‘This is a text that manages to be pacy and accessible, while staying founded in deep scholarship on the long history and current state of ‘development’. As well as explanation and critique, the book finishes with important ideas about how to make things work better.’ -- Emma Mawdsley, University of Cambridge, UK

Table of Contents
Contents: 1. Introduction: the development landscape 2. Mainstream development histories and ideas 3. Borders, boundaries, and classifications 4. Critically (re)thinking development 5. Promises of development: employment, health, and education 6. Migration and mobilities 7. Degradation and sustainability 8. Towards solidarity, decoloniality, and building the pluriverse References Index

Advanced Introduction to Critical Global

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Wed 1 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Uma Kothari, Elise Klein

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      View other formats and editions of Advanced Introduction to Critical Global by Uma Kothari

      Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
      Publication Date: 18/07/2023
      ISBN13: 9781800376090, 978-1800376090
      ISBN10: 180037609X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Elgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and law, expertly written by the world’s leading scholars. Designed to be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject areas.



      This stimulating and accessible Advanced Introduction critically engages with dominant, modernist, and ahistorical narratives of development, foregrounding the overlooked dissonant discourses that are largely written out of mainstream development. It argues that development discourse and practice must remain aware of how historically unequal relations continue to be reproduced today and outlines a range of effective strategies for guiding change towards achieving global social justice.



      Features include:


      • challenges to the claims of universality evident in much development scholarship

      • exposure of critical discourses overlooked by conventional development histories

      • identification of progressive ways to guide change towards achieving global social justice

      • guidance on development approaches and ideas that avoid reproducing colonial forms of representation, knowledge, power, and control

      • the foregrounding of critical postcolonial, decolonial, and feminist perspectives to identify how progressive possibilities for change can emerge.



      This insightful Advanced Introduction will be beneficial to students and scholars of development studies, geography, sociology, anthropology, history, and indigenous studies seeking an understanding of unequal global relations, knowledge production, and the exercise of global power and control. Further, it will be of great value to academics and students interested in postcolonialism, contemporary colonial legacies, and processes of decolonisation and decoloniality.



      Trade Review
      ‘Insisting on how much and little has changed, this book dwells simultaneously in the past, present, and future of development discourse and practice. The immediacy and longevity of the insights it provides are devastating and liberatory. Read it and respond.’ -- Lisa Palmer, University of Melbourne, Australia
      ‘This is a text that manages to be pacy and accessible, while staying founded in deep scholarship on the long history and current state of ‘development’. As well as explanation and critique, the book finishes with important ideas about how to make things work better.’ -- Emma Mawdsley, University of Cambridge, UK

      Table of Contents
      Contents: 1. Introduction: the development landscape 2. Mainstream development histories and ideas 3. Borders, boundaries, and classifications 4. Critically (re)thinking development 5. Promises of development: employment, health, and education 6. Migration and mobilities 7. Degradation and sustainability 8. Towards solidarity, decoloniality, and building the pluriverse References Index

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