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The Post-Development Reader

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The fiftieth anniversary of the United Nations has only recently witnessed the fact that development is still considered by the ruling governments and elites of the world as the only answer to the problems confronting the people of the Third World. By contrast, authoritative and convincing voices are heard with greater force, particularly from the grassroots, which argue that fifty years of development have only led to a new type of colonisation, even more corrosive than the old. Above all, it has exposed its target populations to a new socio-cultural variety of AIDS. Instead of its premises to revitalise their regenerative capacities, it is destroying the very immune system that they had developed to this end throughout the ages. This Reader brings together some of the very best thinking on development by scholars, practitioners and activists from both North and South. They provide a devastating critique of what the mainstream paradigm has in practice done to the peoples of the world and to their richly diverse and sustainable ways of living. They also present some of the essential ideas out of which the victims of development are now constructing new, humane, culturally and ecologically respectful modes of development. This is a powerfully diverse, but ultimately coherent, statement for a new era in the history of development. The collection of essays includes not only writings by well-known figures, or the amazing words of old indigenous sages such as Mahatma Gandhi and Dadacha, the elder of the Boran tribe talking about the need to protect the flow of life, but also the messages of such activists as Subcomandante Marcos or Emnianuel Dione who, each in their way, are actually leading us toward the post-development age.More than 30 boxes bring to the book the thoughts of other prominent radical thinkers concerned with development issues.In the preface to the book, Majid Rahnema, submits his own ideas on the search for a new language and new paradigms.

440 pages, Hardcover

First published March 15, 1997

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Majid Rahnema

7 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Javier.
262 reviews66 followers
October 12, 2007
I liked many of the things the authors had to say, but I can't ultimately get behind the relativism it advocates (ie, let's return to 'communal society' and have the 'respected elders' run the show).
Profile Image for Milan/zzz.
278 reviews57 followers
March 5, 2011
This was such a thought provoking read and an eye opener on so many levels. Maybe I shouldn't rate this one whatsoever because I didn't have enough time to read all essays (my friend who borrowed me while he was staying at my place had to leave and took his book) but the ones I've read were mind-blowing. I don't think I'd be able better to describe this book than what I've read on amazon (or I would be able if I haven't read description there):

"This Reader brings together in a powerfully diverse, but ultimately coherent, statement some of the very best thinking on the subject by scholars and activists from both North and South. They provide a devastating critique of what the mainstream paradigm has in practice done to the peoples of the world and to their richly diverse and sustainable ways of living. They also present some of the essential ideas out of which the victims of development are now constructing new, humane, culturally and ecologically respectful modes of development."
Profile Image for Gabriel.
146 reviews10 followers
February 13, 2015
great compendium of the post-structuralist, decolonial take on development studies and the partisan side many authors, activists and organisers and academics take against domination, authoritarism and the imperialistic means by which development was introduced around the world.
Profile Image for Leanne.
Author 7 books12 followers
October 18, 2016
I really enjoyed this book. It is put together more like a collection of essays rather than an edited book so the chapters don't flow together or add on one another as they usually do in an edited volume - I like it like this though. It means more of the author's voice comes out and makes it a more enjoyable and non-boring read. Great way to get a good overview of post-dev. I would really like an updated version.
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