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Writing the History of Development: A Review of the Recent Literature

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 April 2011

MARC FREY
Affiliation:
Jacobs University Bremen, School of Humanities & Social Sciences – SHSS History, Campus Ring 1, 28759 Bremen, Germany; [email protected]; [email protected].
SÖNKE KUNKEL
Affiliation:
Jacobs University Bremen, School of Humanities & Social Sciences – SHSS History, Campus Ring 1, 28759 Bremen, Germany; [email protected]; [email protected].

Extract

‘Development’ as a ‘process of enlarging people's choices’ is omnipresent. Constituents of global society – governments, international organisations, non-governmental organisations (NGOs), multinational corporations, the media and individual actors – are deeply involved in its practices and discourses. At universities around the world, development studies mushroom, and development research has become a darling of the social sciences. In particular, development assistance has become big business, involving the flow of $136 billion dollars in 2009. But more significantly than before, development issues and especially development assistance have become contested terrain, too. While the millennium development goals defined by the United Nations in 2000 and designed to halve global poverty by the year 2015 call on donor and recipient countries to increase their efforts, critics of development assistance are multiplying.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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References

1 This broad definition of ‘development’ is taken from the first Human Development Report of the UNDP in 1990. See http://hdr.undp.org/en/media/hdr_1990_en_overview.pdf, p. 1.

2 Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development, Query Wizard for International Development Statistics, http://stats.oecd.org/qwids. Official Development Aid, Disbursements.

3 See United Nations Millennium Goals, http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/ (accessed February 2011).

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17 One of the unfortunate consequences of writing agricultural development history as interdisciplinary colonial history is that both books were rarely reviewed, and then only in more minor or specialised journals.

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28 See the contributions by Helge Pharo, Heide-Irene Schmidt, Jan Pedersen, Marc Dierikx and Peter Brunbech in Pharo and Pohle Fraser, The Aid Rush, vol. 1.

29 Jarle Simensen, ‘Aid Symbioses and its Pitfalls. The Nordic/Norwegian-Tanzanian Aid Relationship, 1962–1986’, in Pharo and Pohle Fraser, The Aid Rush, vol. 2, 153–78; Hilde Selbervik, ‘The Norwegian-Tanzanian Aid Relationship in the 1990s: Still Trapped in a Samaritan's Dilemma?’, in Pharo and Pohle Fraser, The Aid Rush, vol. 2, 179–216.

30 Helge Pharo analyses the evolution of the aid regime over time. Though he looks at the Norwegian experience, his overall assessment can be generalised. See Helge Pharo, ‘Reluctance, Enthusiasm and Indulgence: The Expansion of Bilateral Norwegian Aid’, in Pharo and Pohle Fraser, The Aid Rush, vol. 1, 53–90.

31 Thorsten B. Olesen, ‘Between Words and Deeds. Denmark and the NIEO Agenda, 1974–1982’, in Pharo and Pohle Fraser, The Aid Rush, vol. 1, 145–82, and Hanne Hagtvedt Vik, ‘Small, Not Weak? Nordic Strategies to Influence the World Bank in the 1980s’, in Pharo and Pohle Fraser, The Aid Rush, 333–63.

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37 Ibid., 387. Tirthankar Roy argues that foreign aid actually impeded Indian national development. See T. Roy, ‘End of Aid. External Assistance and Development Strategy in India’, in Pharo and Pohle Fraser, The Aid Rush, vol. 2, 95–114.

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41 See, for example, Frey, Marc, ed., Asian Experiences of Development in the 20th Century (Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2010)Google Scholar (special issue of Comparativ. Zeitschrift für Globalgeschichte und vergleichende Gesellschaftsgeschichte, 19, 4 (2009)); Chakrabarty, Dipesh, Provincializing Europe. Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000)Google Scholar; Eisenstadt, Shmuel, Die Vielfalt der Moderne (Weilerswist: Velbrück, 2000)Google Scholar.

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43 Engerman, David C. and Unger, Corinna, eds., ‘Special Forum: Modernization as a Global Project’, Diplomatic History, 33, 3 (2009), 375505CrossRefGoogle Scholar.