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The Roots of the Development Project

The Roots of the Development Project. Ch. 4, Greig, et. al. Stepping back into history Enlightenment and the concept of development Poorer countries and the legacy of colonialism Development pacesetters and late-comers Endogenous and exogenous forces in the process of development.

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The Roots of the Development Project

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  1. The Roots of the Development Project Ch. 4, Greig, et. al.

  2. Stepping back into history • Enlightenment and the concept of development • Poorer countries and the legacy of colonialism • Development pacesetters and late-comers • Endogenous and exogenous forces in the process of development

  3. Progress and Modernity • Modern versus traditional • Late middle ages: religious dogma • Modern era: science • Descartes • Modern dwarfs standing on the shoulders of giants…. • Enlightenment approach: accumulated, generalizable knowledge • Versus tradition: culture is pervaded with what has already been said, by recurrence of discourse, by ‘citational’ practice • Secularization: both natural order and social orders can be understood through reason and hard work • Hence, concept of development

  4. Meanwhile, French Revolution and Industrial Revolution acted as catalysts of modernity • New social relationships • “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity” • Simon and Comte (French sociology) • Karl Marx • Max Weber: rationalization of authority • Durkheim: division of labor and societal change • Simmel • Spencer: social Darwinism • Linear thinkers • Stages

  5. After 1945, focus on post-colonial development • Classical sociological theories adapted • Continuation of the Enlightenment and West European Industrial Revolution • But, even then there was a tension between certainty and uncertainty • Paradoxes of modernity: Marx • Iron cages: Weber • Anomie: Durkheim • But the ‘cult of progress’ came to dominate postwar social theories

  6. Belief in progress is the prozac of the thinking classes • ‘secular religion’

  7. Colonialism and Inequality • Direct colonial rule around the globe • Justifications: gold, but also religious zeal • Later other ‘modern’ justifications: indigenous people were ‘backward’ or ‘pre-civilized’. Protection or tutelage. • Racism: ‘scientific’ justification for national inequalities • Phrenology and eugenics • Ethnicity and environmental determinism explanations • Factor endowments • ‘age of empire’

  8. After WW1 empire was less popular • Colonial rebellions • Opposition movements to exploitation • Students sent to center metropolis and their awareness of exploitation (beginnings of nationalism) • 1917 Bolshevik Revolution • Other examples of resistance and success: Japan as an indsutrializing and military power

  9. Liberal sentiments in Europe and USA • But rise of fascist powers in 1930s • Anti-colonial movement proved irresistible in the wake of the defeat of the fascist axis in 1945 • Legacy of colonialism is controversial • Claim that socio-economic development of postcolonial societies has been distorted by colonial legacy

  10. But others argue that, on balance, it was a ‘good thing’ • D’Souza, Windschuttle (apologists) • Amartya Sen (critic) • But, let us return to our question: are global wealth and poverty interconnected? Structures or stages of development? • But, first, more theory from 20th century

  11. The Setting for Development Practice after 1945 • UN membership: new states proliferate • ‘Development’ as an intellectual and practical project • 1945-70: ‘golden age’…economic boom • Controlling cycles of booms and busts • Keynes • Postwar reconstruction • Employment levels, social services, steer away from recession • Less market mechanism and more regulation • Only Hayek opposed regulation and Keynesianism

  12. Replicating this model in the developing world • Cold War meant that USA and West wanted postcolonial countries to follow a particular trajectory • Soviet Union as alternative model of development • Communism • Kennedy: peaceful revolution (development) versus violent revolution…. • Independence struggles and socialist ideology • Poverty, thus, became important to the US

  13. Poorer countries negotiated to exploit concessions from superpowers • All territory was considered strategic • Foreign intervention • USA’s growing global economic reach • UN, Bretton Woods, GATT, IMF, WB • Once Europe rebuilt, focus was on postcolonial states • Infrastructure

  14. Concessional loans • Unequal terms of trade • Rise of structuralist economists • Exploitation of commodities • Next, we will discuss ‘modernization’ theory and then ‘dependency’ theory

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