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Globalization and Development - Themes and Concepts in Current Research
Edited by Kalb, Don; Pansters, Wil; Siebers, Hans
Springer
2004
Hardcover X, 203 pp ISBN 1402024746
£61.00
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Note Please add an additional 2 -3 weeks to the standard shipping times for delivery of this publication.
This book is a collective effort on the part of researchers affiliated with the CERES Researc
School in Development Studies in the Netherlands to discuss a series of themes and concepts crucial
to the overlapping fields of globalization and development research. While development in the course of the
1980s and 1990s was becoming hinged onto globalization, prior approaches to development were increasingly
being criticized. An impasse was announced by various actors in the field, and renewed reflection on some of the
basic concepts and methods became inevitable. Much of the initial rethinking went under the sign of postmodernism
and tended to give priority to micro- and actor- centered research. Later, with the emerging discussion on globalization,
new macro dimensions were added, and efforts were launched to articulate local/global approaches. This book
discusses a set of key themes and concepts that reflect these intellectual and historical developments. Used by
politicians and researchers, they reflect the continuing concern about inequality and poverty by students and
practitioners of development, and contain crucial perspectives for a critical engagement of current globalization
processes and their consequences. The chapters in this book examine the notions and issues of globalization,
livelihood, identity, governance, transnationalism, and knowledge. Don Kalb is a researcher at the Department
of Cultural Anthropology of Utrecht University and associate professor of sociology and anthropology at the
Central European University (Budapest). Wil Pansters is an associate professor at the Department of Cultural
Anthropology of Utrecht University. Hans Siebers is an associate professor at the Department of Organizational
Sciences of Tilburg University.
Contents
Notes on contributors. Introduction. Conflictive domains
of globalization and development; D. Kalb, W. Pansters, H. Siebers.
1. Time and contention in "the great globalization debate"; D. Kalb.
2. Ways forward in livelihood research; M. Kaag.
3. Identity formation: Issues, challenges and tools; H. Siebers.
4. Governance in action. Some theoretical and practical reflections on a key concept; M. Nuijten.
5. Transcending the nation. Explorations of transnationalism as a concept and phenomenon; V. Mazzucato.
6. Unpacking and re-packing knowledge in development; K. Jansen.
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