"Decolonizing Development "investigates the ways colonialism shaped the modern world by analyzing the relationship between colonialism and development as forms of power.Based on novel interpretations of postcolonial and Marxist theory and applied to original research dataAmply supplemented with maps and illustrationsAn intriguing and invaluable resource for scholars of postcolonialism, development, geography, and the Maya
Although this book is written from all sorts of post- perspectives (postcolonialism, post-structuralism, post-Marxism, postmodernism), it's remarkably clear and grounded in historical and ethnographic detail. This last bit is ironic, because the author (a geographer) explicitly critiques anthropology and the ethnographic tradition, yet it's obvious to me that his work with the Maya movement helped him frame his argument and provided data ... just as in a good ethnographic study.
I'm not yet certain how I feel about his arguments, but it's a great intro to contemporary (radical) geographic theories of space and territory, as well as an attempt to think through decolonizing and critiquing development. It's avowedly not "anti-development," which he describes as a fallacy, but seek to move *beyond* development.