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Postdevelopment theory

Postdevelopment theory (also post-development or anti-development or development criticism) holds that the whole concept and practice of development is a reflection of Western-Northern hegemony over the rest of the world. Postdevelopment thought arose in the 1980s[1] out of criticisms voiced against development projects and development theory, which justified them.

Development as ideology edit

The postdevelopment critique holds that modern development theory is a creation of academia in tandem with an underlying political and economic ideology. The academic, political, and economic nature of development means it tends to be policy oriented, problem-driven, and therefore effective only in terms of and in relation to a particular, pre-existing social theory.

The actual development projects thus initiated, by both governments and NGOs, are directed in accordance with this development theory. Development theory itself, however, assumes a framework already set in place by government and political culture in order to implement it. The development process is therefore socially constructed; Western interests are guiding its direction and outcome, and so development itself fundamentally reflects the pattern of Western hegemony.

Development as an ideology and a social vision is ingrained in the ideals of modernization, which holds western economic structure and society as a universal model for others to follow and emulate. Rooted in western influence, the developmental discourse reflects the unequal power relations between the west and the rest of the world, whereby the western knowledge of development, approach toward development, and conception of what development entails, as well as perceptions of progress, directs the course for the rest of the world.

Reviewing development edit

Influenced by Ivan Illich and other critics of colonialism and postcolonialism, a number of postdevelopment theorists like Arturo Escobar and Gustavo Esteva have challenged the very meaning of development. According to them, the way we understand development is rooted in the earlier colonial discourse that depicts the North as "advanced" and "progressive", and the South as "backward", "degenerate" and "primitive".

They point out that a new way of thinking about development began in 1949 with President Harry Truman's declaration: "The old imperialism—exploitation for foreign profit—has no place in our plans. What we envisage is a program of development based on the concepts of democratic fair dealings."[2] While claiming that the "era of development" began at this point, postdevelopment theorists do not suggest that the concept of development was new. What was new was the definition of development in terms of an escape from underdevelopment. Since the latter referred to two-thirds of the world, this meant that most societies were made to see themselves as having fallen into the undignified condition of "underdevelopment", and thus to look outside of their own cultures for salvation.

Development, according to these critics, was now a euphemism for post-war American hegemony; it was the ideals and development programs of the United States and its (Western) European allies that would form the basis of development everywhere else.

Postdevelopment theory edit

Postdevelopment theory arose in the 1980s and 1990s through the works of scholars like Arturo Escobar, Gustavo Esteva, Majid Rahnema, Wolfgang Sachs, James Ferguson, Serge Latouche, and Gilbert Rist. Leading members of the postdevelopment school argue that development was always unjust, never worked, and at this point has clearly failed. According to Wolfgang Sachs, a leading member of the postdevelopment school, "the idea of development stands like a ruin in the intellectual landscape" and "it is time to dismantle this mental structure."[3]

To cite an example of this "mental structure", development theorists point out how the concept of development has resulted in the hierarchy of developed and underdeveloped nations, where the developed nations are seen as more advanced and superior to the underdeveloped nations that are conceived as inferior, in need of help from the developed nations, and desiring to be like the developed nations. The postdevelopment school of thought points out that the models of development are often ethnocentric (in this case Eurocentric), universalist, and based on western models of industrialization that are unsustainable in this world of limited resources and ineffective for their ignorance of the local, cultural and historical contexts of the peoples to which they are applied. In essence, the problem postdevelopment theorists see in development and its practice is an imbalance of influence or domination by the west. Postdevelopment theorists promote more pluralism in ideas about development.

Critique of ethnocentrism and universalism edit

Among the starting points and basic assumptions of postdevelopment thought is the idea that a middle-class, Western lifestyle and all that goes with it (which might include the nuclear family, mass consumption, living in suburbia and extensive private space), may neither be a realistic nor a desirable goal for the majority of the world's population. In this sense, development is seen as requiring the loss, or indeed the deliberate extermination (ethnocide) of indigenous culture[4] or other psychologically and environmentally rich and rewarding modes of life. As a result, formerly satisfactory ways of life become dissatisfying because development changes people's perception of themselves.

Majid Rahnema cites Helena Norberg-Hodge[5] "To take an example, Helena Norberg-Hodge mentions how the notion of poverty hardly existed in Ladakh when she visited that country for the first time in 1975. Today she says, it has become part of the language. When visiting an outlying village some eight years ago, Helena asked a young Ladakhi where were the poorest houses. 'We have no poor houses in our village,' was the proud reply. Recently Helena saw the same Ladakhi talking to an American tourist and overheard him say, 'if only you could do something for us, we are so poor.'"[6]

Development is seen as a set of interventions and worldviews which are also powers: to intervene, to transform and to rule. Postdevelopment critiques challenge the notion of a single path to development and demand acknowledgment of diversity of cultural perspectives and priorities.

For example, postdevelopment theorists argue that the politics of defining and satisfying needs is a crucial dimension of development thought, deeply entwined in the concept of agency. Yet, questions of who voices development concerns, what power relations are played out among agents, and how the interests of socially-constructed development experts (e.g., the World Bank, IMF officials) rule the development priorities are not often addressed in classical development thought. The postdevelopment approach attempts to overcome this gap by opening up academic, practice, and other spaces for non-Western peoples and their concerns.

Postdevelopment theory is a critique of the standard assumptions about who possesses the key to progress and how it may be implemented.

Alternatives to development edit

While the postdevelopment school provides a plethora of development critiques, it also considers alternative methods for bringing about positive change. The postdevelopment school proposes a particular vision of society removed from the discourse of development, modernity, politics, cultural and economic influences from the west, and market oriented and centralized authoritarian societies.

In his works, Escobar has outlined the common features of postdevelopment thought and societal vision. According to Escobar, the postdevelopment school of thought is interested (in terms of searching for an alternative to development) in "local culture and knowledge; a critical stance toward established scientific discourses; and the defense and promotion of localized, pluralistic grassroots movements." Grassroots movements, Escobar argues, are "local, pluralistic, and distrust organized politics and development establishment."[7]

Postdevelopment thought takes inspiration from vernacular societies, the informal sector and frugal rather than materialistic lifestyles. Furthermore, postdevelopment theorists advocate for structural changes. According to Escobar, postdevelopmental thinking believes that the economy must be based around solidarity and reciprocity; policy must focus on direct democracy; and knowledge systems should be traditional, or at least a hybrid of modern and traditional knowledge. Decolonial programmatics include ALBA: The Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America,[8] initiated by Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez in 2004 in response to neoliberal development projects such as FTAA and NAFTA. ALBA is analyzed and conceptualized using concepts elaborated by decolonial scholars of the Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) region. According to Al-Kassimi,[8] as a decolonial delinking performance, ALBA proposes an alternative to development project that embodies the spirit of Bandung and principles of South-South Cooperation thereby contesting the a priori belief that only (western) knowledge systems informing modernity and civilization lead to economic and social development.[8]

A recent survey claims that as alternatives to development, "the practice of postdevelopment is already being carried out by actors in and out of development".[9] "Postdevelopment in practice begins with the insistence that an enduring diversity of socialities, a multiplicity of southern knowledges and nature/culture assemblages, and postcolonial political economies reveals already existing alternatives."[10]

James Ferguson edit

One of the leading anti-development writers, James Ferguson contributed to what John Rapley termed "the most important of the opening salvos" of postdevelopment theory with his book The Anti-Politics Machine: Development, Depoliticization, and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho. In The Anti-Politics Machine Ferguson describes the failure of the development project to properly understand the cultural and economic values of the people of Lesotho. This misunderstanding led to misappropriation of resources by the international community and myriad negative consequences for Basotho (residents of Lesotho), prompting Ferguson to comment that "Capitalist interests [...] can only operate through a set of social and cultural structures so complex that the outcome may be only a baroque and unrecognizable transformation of the original intention."[11] Development projects cannot simply create a desired result, but instead have a number of unexpected consequences.

Ferguson suggests that although development projects often end in failure, they still produce tangible impacts in the physical and social-political environment. In The Anti-Politics Machine, he asks, "What do aid programs do besides fail to help poor people?"[11] In the case of Lesotho, Ferguson proposes that, "while the project did not transform livestock-keeping it did build a road to link to Thaba-Tsea more strongly with the capital."[11] Ferguson argues that there is value to understanding and thinking about the unintended consequences for an environment.

Arturo Escobar edit

Critics of development do not deny the need for change. They argue instead that to enact proper and effective change, change itself must first be conceived in different terms. Arturo Escobar, another leading member of the postdevelopment school, argues:

While social change has probably always been part of the human experience, it was only within the European modernity that 'society', i.e. the whole way of life of a people, was open to empirical analysis and made the subject of planned change. And while communities in the Third World may find that there is a need for some sort of organised or directed change—in part to reverse the damage done by development—this undoubtedly will not take the form of 'designing life' or social engineering. In this long run, this means that categories and meanings have to be redefined; through their innovative political practice, new social movements of various kinds are already embarked on this process of redefining the social, and knowledge itself.[12]

Majid Rahnema edit

Majid Rahnema addresses the question of which path to take directly in his conclusion to the Post-Development Reader. Rahnema admits that it may be true that a large majority of people, whose lives are in fact difficult, do want change. But the answer he suggests is not development but the "end of development". He says that the end of development is not "An end to the search for new possibilities of change, for a relational world of friendship, or for genuine processes of regeneration able to give birth to new forms of solidarity". Rather, Rahnema argues, the "inhumane and the ultimately destructive approach to change is over. It should resemble a call to the 'good people' everywhere to think and work together."[13]

Serge Latouche edit

Serge Latouche is a French emeritus professor in economy at the University of Paris-Sud. A specialist in North-South economic and cultural relations, and in social sciences epistemology, he has developed a critical theory towards economic orthodoxy. He denounces economism, utilitarianism in social sciences, consumer society and the notion of sustainable development. He particularly criticizes the notions of economic efficiency and economic rationalism. He is one of the thinkers and most renowned partisans of the degrowth theory.[14] Latouche has also published in the Revue de Mauss, a French anti-utilitarian journal.

Wolfgang Sachs and The Development Dictionary edit

Wolfgang Sachs is a leading writer in postdevelopment thought. Most of his writing is focused on environmentally sustainable development and the idea that past notions of development are naturally unsustainable practices on our finite planet. However, in 1992 he co-authored and edited The Development Dictionary: A Guide to Knowledge as Power which contributed greatly to the compilation of post-development literature as a general theory.

This manifesto posits that the new era of development that emerged in the 1950s was created by the United States in order to secure its new hegemonic position in the global community. Sachs explains that the concept of "underdevelopment" was actually constructed in Harry S. Truman's 1949 inaugural address, which popularized the term. Sachs argues that the creation of this term was a discrete, strategic move to secure American hegemony by reinforcing the idea that the United States is at the top, and other countries on a lower pillar, of a linear and singular trajectory of development. It created a homogeneous identity for these countries and stripped them of their own diverse characteristics. "It converts participation into a manipulative trick to involve people in struggles for getting what the powerful want to impose on them."[15]

The Development Dictionary describes a biological metaphor for development. This biological metaphor was transferred to the social sphere and perpetuated the ideal that there is one natural way to develop into the perfect form. To develop in a manner disparate from the "natural order of things" was to become a disfigured anomaly. This definition held the potential to provide morally ambiguous justification for imperialist behavior and can be connected to colonial discourse and mainstream development theories. Under such categorization, Sachs explains, development was reduced to a simple measurement of the economic growth of per capita production.

Sachs issues a cry for public awareness of the "limits of development." He leaves the reader with the idea of the "New Commons" and posits that men and women should begin with this awareness before attempting to introduce new political policies with room for creativity and innovation in diverse development paths.

Criticisms edit

There is a large body of works which are critical of postdevelopment theory and its proponents. It has been noted that postdevelopment theory sees all development as imposed upon the developing world by the West. This dualist perspective of development may be unrealistic, and Marc Edelman notes that a large proportion of development has risen from, rather than been imposed upon, the developing world.[16] Citing Jonathan Crush's point that "Development, for all its power to speak and to control the terms of speaking, has never been impervious to challenge and resistance, nor, in response, to reformulation and change."[17] Ray Kiely argues that "The post-development idea is thus part of a long history within the development discourse."[18] In short, Kiely argues that postdevelopment theory is merely the latest version of a set of criticisms that have long been evident within writing and thought in the field of development. Development has always been about choices, Kiely explains. Choices with resulting losers and winners, dilemmas and destruction, as well as creative possibility.

Critics also argue that postdevelopment perpetuates cultural relativism: the idea that cultural beliefs and practices can be judged only by those who practice them. By accepting all cultural behaviors and beliefs as valid and rejecting a universal standard for living and understanding life, critics of postdevelopment argue, postdevelopment represents the opposite extreme of universalism, extreme relativism. Such a relativist extreme, rather than besting extreme universalism, has equally dangerous implications. John Rapley points out that "rejection of essentialism rests itself on an essentialist claim – namely, that all truth is constructed and arbitrary[...]"[19]

Kiely also argues that by rejecting a top-down, centralized approach to development and promoting development through local means, postdevelopment thought perpetuates neo-liberal ideals. Kiely remarks that "The argument — upheld by dependency and post-development theory — that the First World needs the Third World, and vice versa, rehearses neo-liberal assumptions that the world is an equal playing field in which all nation states have the capacity to compete equally[...]"[20] In other words, making locals responsible for their own predicament, postdevelopment unintentionally agrees with neo-liberalist ideology that favors decentralized projects and ignores the possibility of assisting impoverished demographics, instead making the fallacious assumption that such demographics must succeed on their own initiative alone. Kiely notes that not all grassroots movements are progressive. Postdevelopment is seen to empower anti-modern fundamentalists and traditionalists, who may hold non-progressive and oppressive values.[18]

Notable development critics edit

See also edit

Opposing theories edit

References edit

  1. ^ Matthews, Sally J. (1 March 2010), "Postdevelopment Theory", Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies, doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190846626.013.39, ISBN 978-0-19-084662-6, retrieved 19 November 2023
  2. ^ Truman 1949.
  3. ^ Sachs 1992, p. 1, "Introduction" by Wolfgang Sachs.
  4. ^ Norberg-Hodge 1991.
  5. ^ Bunyard 1984, p. 3, cited in Sachs 1992, p. 161
  6. ^ Sachs 1992, p. 161, "Poverty" by Majid Rahnema.
  7. ^ Escobar 2018, "Preface and Acknowledgements".
  8. ^ a b c Al-Kassimi 2018.
  9. ^ Klein & Morreo 2019, "Introduction".
  10. ^ Klein & Morreo 2019, "Postdevelopment in Practice".
  11. ^ a b c Ferguson 1994.
  12. ^ Sachs 1992, p. 185.
  13. ^ Rahnema 1997, p. 391.
  14. ^ . www.solutionslocales-lefilm.com. Archived from the original on 31 December 2012.
  15. ^ Sachs 1992.
  16. ^ Edelman 1999.
  17. ^ Crush 1995, p. 8.
  18. ^ a b Kiely 1999.
  19. ^ Rapley 2004.
  20. ^ Kiely 1994.

Bibliography edit

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postdevelopment, theory, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, fe. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Postdevelopment theory news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Postdevelopment theory also post development or anti development or development criticism holds that the whole concept and practice of development is a reflection of Western Northern hegemony over the rest of the world Postdevelopment thought arose in the 1980s 1 out of criticisms voiced against development projects and development theory which justified them Contents 1 Development as ideology 2 Reviewing development 3 Postdevelopment theory 3 1 Critique of ethnocentrism and universalism 3 2 Alternatives to development 3 3 James Ferguson 3 4 Arturo Escobar 3 5 Majid Rahnema 3 6 Serge Latouche 3 7 Wolfgang Sachs and The Development Dictionary 4 Criticisms 5 Notable development critics 6 See also 6 1 Opposing theories 7 References 8 BibliographyDevelopment as ideology editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The postdevelopment critique holds that modern development theory is a creation of academia in tandem with an underlying political and economic ideology The academic political and economic nature of development means it tends to be policy oriented problem driven and therefore effective only in terms of and in relation to a particular pre existing social theory The actual development projects thus initiated by both governments and NGOs are directed in accordance with this development theory Development theory itself however assumes a framework already set in place by government and political culture in order to implement it The development process is therefore socially constructed Western interests are guiding its direction and outcome and so development itself fundamentally reflects the pattern of Western hegemony Development as an ideology and a social vision is ingrained in the ideals of modernization which holds western economic structure and society as a universal model for others to follow and emulate Rooted in western influence the developmental discourse reflects the unequal power relations between the west and the rest of the world whereby the western knowledge of development approach toward development and conception of what development entails as well as perceptions of progress directs the course for the rest of the world Reviewing development editInfluenced by Ivan Illich and other critics of colonialism and postcolonialism a number of postdevelopment theorists like Arturo Escobar and Gustavo Esteva have challenged the very meaning of development According to them the way we understand development is rooted in the earlier colonial discourse that depicts the North as advanced and progressive and the South as backward degenerate and primitive They point out that a new way of thinking about development began in 1949 with President Harry Truman s declaration The old imperialism exploitation for foreign profit has no place in our plans What we envisage is a program of development based on the concepts of democratic fair dealings 2 While claiming that the era of development began at this point postdevelopment theorists do not suggest that the concept of development was new What was new was the definition of development in terms of an escape from underdevelopment Since the latter referred to two thirds of the world this meant that most societies were made to see themselves as having fallen into the undignified condition of underdevelopment and thus to look outside of their own cultures for salvation Development according to these critics was now a euphemism for post war American hegemony it was the ideals and development programs of the United States and its Western European allies that would form the basis of development everywhere else Postdevelopment theory editPostdevelopment theory arose in the 1980s and 1990s through the works of scholars like Arturo Escobar Gustavo Esteva Majid Rahnema Wolfgang Sachs James Ferguson Serge Latouche and Gilbert Rist Leading members of the postdevelopment school argue that development was always unjust never worked and at this point has clearly failed According to Wolfgang Sachs a leading member of the postdevelopment school the idea of development stands like a ruin in the intellectual landscape and it is time to dismantle this mental structure 3 To cite an example of this mental structure development theorists point out how the concept of development has resulted in the hierarchy of developed and underdeveloped nations where the developed nations are seen as more advanced and superior to the underdeveloped nations that are conceived as inferior in need of help from the developed nations and desiring to be like the developed nations The postdevelopment school of thought points out that the models of development are often ethnocentric in this case Eurocentric universalist and based on western models of industrialization that are unsustainable in this world of limited resources and ineffective for their ignorance of the local cultural and historical contexts of the peoples to which they are applied In essence the problem postdevelopment theorists see in development and its practice is an imbalance of influence or domination by the west Postdevelopment theorists promote more pluralism in ideas about development Critique of ethnocentrism and universalism edit This section is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Among the starting points and basic assumptions of postdevelopment thought is the idea that a middle class Western lifestyle and all that goes with it which might include the nuclear family mass consumption living in suburbia and extensive private space may neither be a realistic nor a desirable goal for the majority of the world s population In this sense development is seen as requiring the loss or indeed the deliberate extermination ethnocide of indigenous culture 4 or other psychologically and environmentally rich and rewarding modes of life As a result formerly satisfactory ways of life become dissatisfying because development changes people s perception of themselves Majid Rahnema cites Helena Norberg Hodge 5 To take an example Helena Norberg Hodge mentions how the notion of poverty hardly existed in Ladakh when she visited that country for the first time in 1975 Today she says it has become part of the language When visiting an outlying village some eight years ago Helena asked a young Ladakhi where were the poorest houses We have no poor houses in our village was the proud reply Recently Helena saw the same Ladakhi talking to an American tourist and overheard him say if only you could do something for us we are so poor 6 Development is seen as a set of interventions and worldviews which are also powers to intervene to transform and to rule Postdevelopment critiques challenge the notion of a single path to development and demand acknowledgment of diversity of cultural perspectives and priorities For example postdevelopment theorists argue that the politics of defining and satisfying needs is a crucial dimension of development thought deeply entwined in the concept of agency Yet questions of who voices development concerns what power relations are played out among agents and how the interests of socially constructed development experts e g the World Bank IMF officials rule the development priorities are not often addressed in classical development thought The postdevelopment approach attempts to overcome this gap by opening up academic practice and other spaces for non Western peoples and their concerns Postdevelopment theory is a critique of the standard assumptions about who possesses the key to progress and how it may be implemented Alternatives to development edit While the postdevelopment school provides a plethora of development critiques it also considers alternative methods for bringing about positive change The postdevelopment school proposes a particular vision of society removed from the discourse of development modernity politics cultural and economic influences from the west and market oriented and centralized authoritarian societies In his works Escobar has outlined the common features of postdevelopment thought and societal vision According to Escobar the postdevelopment school of thought is interested in terms of searching for an alternative to development in local culture and knowledge a critical stance toward established scientific discourses and the defense and promotion of localized pluralistic grassroots movements Grassroots movements Escobar argues are local pluralistic and distrust organized politics and development establishment 7 Postdevelopment thought takes inspiration from vernacular societies the informal sector and frugal rather than materialistic lifestyles Furthermore postdevelopment theorists advocate for structural changes According to Escobar postdevelopmental thinking believes that the economy must be based around solidarity and reciprocity policy must focus on direct democracy and knowledge systems should be traditional or at least a hybrid of modern and traditional knowledge Decolonial programmatics include ALBA The Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America 8 initiated by Fidel Castro and Hugo Chavez in 2004 in response to neoliberal development projects such as FTAA and NAFTA ALBA is analyzed and conceptualized using concepts elaborated by decolonial scholars of the Latin American and Caribbean LAC region According to Al Kassimi 8 as a decolonial delinking performance ALBA proposes an alternative to development project that embodies the spirit of Bandung and principles of South South Cooperation thereby contesting the a priori belief that only western knowledge systems informing modernity and civilization lead to economic and social development 8 A recent survey claims that as alternatives to development the practice of postdevelopment is already being carried out by actors in and out of development 9 Postdevelopment in practice begins with the insistence that an enduring diversity of socialities a multiplicity of southern knowledges and nature culture assemblages and postcolonial political economies reveals already existing alternatives 10 James Ferguson edit Further information James Ferguson anthropologist One of the leading anti development writers James Ferguson contributed to what John Rapley termed the most important of the opening salvos of postdevelopment theory with his book The Anti Politics Machine Development Depoliticization and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho In The Anti Politics Machine Ferguson describes the failure of the development project to properly understand the cultural and economic values of the people of Lesotho This misunderstanding led to misappropriation of resources by the international community and myriad negative consequences for Basotho residents of Lesotho prompting Ferguson to comment that Capitalist interests can only operate through a set of social and cultural structures so complex that the outcome may be only a baroque and unrecognizable transformation of the original intention 11 Development projects cannot simply create a desired result but instead have a number of unexpected consequences Ferguson suggests that although development projects often end in failure they still produce tangible impacts in the physical and social political environment In The Anti Politics Machine he asks What do aid programs do besides fail to help poor people 11 In the case of Lesotho Ferguson proposes that while the project did not transform livestock keeping it did build a road to link to Thaba Tsea more strongly with the capital 11 Ferguson argues that there is value to understanding and thinking about the unintended consequences for an environment Arturo Escobar edit Further information Arturo Escobar anthropologist Critics of development do not deny the need for change They argue instead that to enact proper and effective change change itself must first be conceived in different terms Arturo Escobar another leading member of the postdevelopment school argues While social change has probably always been part of the human experience it was only within the European modernity that society i e the whole way of life of a people was open to empirical analysis and made the subject of planned change And while communities in the Third World may find that there is a need for some sort of organised or directed change in part to reverse the damage done by development this undoubtedly will not take the form of designing life or social engineering In this long run this means that categories and meanings have to be redefined through their innovative political practice new social movements of various kinds are already embarked on this process of redefining the social and knowledge itself 12 Majid Rahnema edit Further information Majid Rahnema Majid Rahnema addresses the question of which path to take directly in his conclusion to the Post Development Reader Rahnema admits that it may be true that a large majority of people whose lives are in fact difficult do want change But the answer he suggests is not development but the end of development He says that the end of development is not An end to the search for new possibilities of change for a relational world of friendship or for genuine processes of regeneration able to give birth to new forms of solidarity Rather Rahnema argues the inhumane and the ultimately destructive approach to change is over It should resemble a call to the good people everywhere to think and work together 13 Serge Latouche edit Further information Serge Latouche Serge Latouche is a French emeritus professor in economy at the University of Paris Sud A specialist in North South economic and cultural relations and in social sciences epistemology he has developed a critical theory towards economic orthodoxy He denounces economism utilitarianism in social sciences consumer society and the notion of sustainable development He particularly criticizes the notions of economic efficiency and economic rationalism He is one of the thinkers and most renowned partisans of the degrowth theory 14 Latouche has also published in the Revue de Mauss a French anti utilitarian journal Wolfgang Sachs and The Development Dictionary edit Further information Wolfgang Sachs Wolfgang Sachs is a leading writer in postdevelopment thought Most of his writing is focused on environmentally sustainable development and the idea that past notions of development are naturally unsustainable practices on our finite planet However in 1992 he co authored and edited The Development Dictionary A Guide to Knowledge as Power which contributed greatly to the compilation of post development literature as a general theory This manifesto posits that the new era of development that emerged in the 1950s was created by the United States in order to secure its new hegemonic position in the global community Sachs explains that the concept of underdevelopment was actually constructed in Harry S Truman s 1949 inaugural address which popularized the term Sachs argues that the creation of this term was a discrete strategic move to secure American hegemony by reinforcing the idea that the United States is at the top and other countries on a lower pillar of a linear and singular trajectory of development It created a homogeneous identity for these countries and stripped them of their own diverse characteristics It converts participation into a manipulative trick to involve people in struggles for getting what the powerful want to impose on them 15 The Development Dictionary describes a biological metaphor for development This biological metaphor was transferred to the social sphere and perpetuated the ideal that there is one natural way to develop into the perfect form To develop in a manner disparate from the natural order of things was to become a disfigured anomaly This definition held the potential to provide morally ambiguous justification for imperialist behavior and can be connected to colonial discourse and mainstream development theories Under such categorization Sachs explains development was reduced to a simple measurement of the economic growth of per capita production Sachs issues a cry for public awareness of the limits of development He leaves the reader with the idea of the New Commons and posits that men and women should begin with this awareness before attempting to introduce new political policies with room for creativity and innovation in diverse development paths Criticisms editThere is a large body of works which are critical of postdevelopment theory and its proponents It has been noted that postdevelopment theory sees all development as imposed upon the developing world by the West This dualist perspective of development may be unrealistic and Marc Edelman notes that a large proportion of development has risen from rather than been imposed upon the developing world 16 Citing Jonathan Crush s point that Development for all its power to speak and to control the terms of speaking has never been impervious to challenge and resistance nor in response to reformulation and change 17 Ray Kiely argues that The post development idea is thus part of a long history within the development discourse 18 In short Kiely argues that postdevelopment theory is merely the latest version of a set of criticisms that have long been evident within writing and thought in the field of development Development has always been about choices Kiely explains Choices with resulting losers and winners dilemmas and destruction as well as creative possibility Critics also argue that postdevelopment perpetuates cultural relativism the idea that cultural beliefs and practices can be judged only by those who practice them By accepting all cultural behaviors and beliefs as valid and rejecting a universal standard for living and understanding life critics of postdevelopment argue postdevelopment represents the opposite extreme of universalism extreme relativism Such a relativist extreme rather than besting extreme universalism has equally dangerous implications John Rapley points out that rejection of essentialism rests itself on an essentialist claim namely that all truth is constructed and arbitrary 19 Kiely also argues that by rejecting a top down centralized approach to development and promoting development through local means postdevelopment thought perpetuates neo liberal ideals Kiely remarks that The argument upheld by dependency and post development theory that the First World needs the Third World and vice versa rehearses neo liberal assumptions that the world is an equal playing field in which all nation states have the capacity to compete equally 20 In other words making locals responsible for their own predicament postdevelopment unintentionally agrees with neo liberalist ideology that favors decentralized projects and ignores the possibility of assisting impoverished demographics instead making the fallacious assumption that such demographics must succeed on their own initiative alone Kiely notes that not all grassroots movements are progressive Postdevelopment is seen to empower anti modern fundamentalists and traditionalists who may hold non progressive and oppressive values 18 Notable development critics editEdward Abbey John Africa Stafford Beer viable system model Charles A Coulombe Stanley Diamond Jacques Ellul Arturo Escobar anthropologist Gustavo Esteva Julius Evola James Ferguson anthropologist Masanobu Fukuoka Mohandas Gandhi Edward Goldsmith David Graeber Rene Guenon Martin Heidegger Ivan Illich Derrick Jensen Theodore Kaczynski Ruhollah Khomeini Philip Larkin Pentti Linkola Ned Ludd Maria Mies Yukio Mishima MOVE organization Francois Partant Fredy Perlman Daniel Quinn Majid Rahnema Gilbert Rist Vandana Shiva Henry David Thoreau John ZerzanSee also editAnarcho primitivism Critical theory Critique of technology Deep ecology Degrowth Eco anarchism Eco feminism High modernism Human history Industrialization Modernization Myth of progress Neo Luddism Neotribalism Paradigm shift Principles of intelligent urbanism Radical traditionalism The Rights of Nature in Ecuador Sumak Kawsay Simple living Social criticism Opposing theories edit Modernization theory NeoliberalismReferences edit Matthews Sally J 1 March 2010 Postdevelopment Theory Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190846626 013 39 ISBN 978 0 19 084662 6 retrieved 19 November 2023 Truman 1949 Sachs 1992 p 1 Introduction by Wolfgang Sachs Norberg Hodge 1991 Bunyard 1984 p 3 cited in Sachs 1992 p 161 Sachs 1992 p 161 Poverty by Majid Rahnema Escobar 2018 Preface and Acknowledgements a b c Al Kassimi 2018 Klein amp Morreo 2019 Introduction Klein amp Morreo 2019 Postdevelopment in Practice a b c Ferguson 1994 Sachs 1992 p 185 Rahnema 1997 p 391 Serge Latouche www solutionslocales lefilm com Archived from the original on 31 December 2012 Sachs 1992 Edelman 1999 Crush 1995 p 8 a b Kiely 1999 Rapley 2004 Kiely 1994 Bibliography editAl Kassimi Khaled 12 November 2018 ALBA A Decolonial Delinking Performance Towards Western Modernity An Alternative to Development Project Cogent Social Sciences 4 1 Informa UK doi 10 1080 23311886 2018 1546418 Bodley John H 11 April 2008 1st pub 1972 Victims of Progress 5th ed Lanham AltaMira Press ISBN 978 0 7591 1148 6 OL 16833983M Bunyard Peter 1984 Can Self sufficient Communities Survive the Onslaught of Development PDF The Ecologist 14 1 Cornwall Edward Goldsmith 2 5 Crush Jonathan ed 12 September 1995 Power of Development London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 11177 5 OL 1114728M Edelman Marc 1999 Peasants Against Globalization Rural Social Movements in Costa Rica Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3693 0 OL 7929259M Escobar Arturo 1995 Encountering Development The Making and Unmaking of the Third World Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00102 9 OL 1096429M Escobar Arturo 15 March 2018 Designs for the Pluriverse Radical Interdependence Autonomy and the Making of Worlds Duke University Press doi 10 1215 9780822371816 ISBN 978 0 8223 7181 6 OL 29790732M Ferguson James 1994 The Anti Politics Machine Development Depoliticization and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 521 37382 1 OL 2213259M Gandhi Mohandas K 1939 1st pub 1938 Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule 2nd rev ed Ahmedabad Navajivan Publishing House ISBN 9788172290702 Ginzburg Oren 1 July 2008 1st pub March 2005 There You Go PDF 2nd ed Hungry Man Books ISBN 978 0 946592 22 7 OL 32967132M Archived from the original PDF on 21 January 2022 Retrieved 27 June 2022 Gregory Derek Johnston Ron Pratt Geraldine Watts Michael Whatmore Sarah eds June 2009 Post development The Dictionary of Human Geography Hoboken Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 405 13288 6 OL 17103524M Illich Ivan 1973 Tools for Conviviality New York Evanston San Francisco London Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 012138 9 OL 5289380M Kiely Ray 1994 Development theory and industrialisation Beyond the impasse Journal of Contemporary Asia 24 2 Informa UK 133 160 doi 10 1080 00472339480000101 Kiely Ray 1 June 1999 The Last Refuge of the Noble Savage A Critical Assessment of Post Development Theory European Journal of Development Research 11 1 30 55 doi 10 1080 09578819908426726 S2CID 143454475 Klein Elise Morreo Carlos Eduardo eds 23 April 2019 Postdevelopment in Practice Alternatives Economies Ontologies Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 58867 7 OL 34663311M Latouche Serge 1993 In the Wake of the Affluent Society An Exploration of Post Development London Zed Books ISBN 978 1 85649 171 6 OL 1405704M Norberg Hodge Helena 1991 Ancient Futures Learning from Ladakh Sierra Club Books ISBN 978 0 87156 643 0 OL 8348621M Pieterse Jan Nederveen 25 August 2010 After Post Development Third World Quarterly 21 2 Informa UK 175 191 doi 10 1080 01436590050004300 S2CID 143782668 Rahnema Majid 1 March 1997 Rahnema Majid Bawtree Victoria eds The Post Development Reader London Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 85649 473 1 OL 987562M Rapley John 1 October 2004 Development Studies and the Post Development Critique Progress in Development Studies 4 4 350 354 doi 10 1191 1464993404ps095pr S2CID 145323059 Rist Gilbert 2003 1st pub 1997 The History of Development From Western Origins to Global Faith Expanded ed London Zed Books ISBN 978 1 84277 180 8 OL 3561498M Sachs Wolfgang et al 2 January 1992 Sachs Wolfgang ed The Development Dictionary A Guide to Knowledge as Power London Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 85649 043 6 OL 8996501M Sidaway James D June 2007 Spaces of Postdevelopment Progress in Human Geography 31 3 SAGE Publications 345 361 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 123 7542 doi 10 1177 0309132507077405 S2CID 15793383 Thoreau Henry David 9 August 1854 Walden or Life in the Woods 1st ed Boston Ticknor and Fields OCLC 4103827 OL 16793205M Truman Harry S 20 January 1949 Four Point Speech Speech Presidential inauguration United States Capitol Retrieved 27 June 2022 Ziai Aram ed 29 April 2007 Exploring Post Development Theory and Practice Problems and Perspectives London Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203962091 ISBN 978 0 203 96209 1 OL 34587175M Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Postdevelopment theory amp oldid 1215070699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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