7 results
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2. The New Washington Consensus: Millennial Philanthropy and the Making of Global Market Subjects.
- Author
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Mitchell, Katharyne and Sparke, Matthew
- Subjects
- *
NEOLIBERALISM , *SOCIAL services , *ECONOMIC development , *PARTNERSHIPS in education , *HUMANITARIANISM , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper outlines the emergence of a New Washington Consensus associated with leading philanthropies of the new millennium. This emergent development paradigm by no means represents a historic break with the market rationalities of neoliberalism, nor does it represent a radical departure from older models of early 20th century philanthropy. Rather, it is new in its global ambition to foster resilient market subjects for a globalized world; and new in its employment of micro-market transformations to compensate for macro-market failures. Focusing on reforms pioneered by the new philanthropic partnerships in education and global health, the paper indicates how the targets of intervention are identified as communities that have been failed by both governments and markets. The resulting interventions are commonly justified in terms of 'return on investment'. But the problems they target keep returning because the underlying causes of failure are left unaddressed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. African Social Sciences and Development in the New Century: Challenges and Prospects.
- Author
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Anugwom, Edlyne E.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL sciences , *ECONOMIC development , *CIVILIZATION , *HISTORY , *SCIENCE - Abstract
This paper examines the travails of the social sciences in Africa since the post-colonial era. It pinpoints the fact that the ability of the social sciences to be really meaningful to the delusive development quest by Africa has been undermined by a combination of structural and epistemological problems. These problems range from the dismal economic environment in the continent, the structural limitations imposed on research, poor conditions of service to laziness and epistemological inferiority among African social scientists. However, the paper posits that the current wind of change blowing across Africa, a re-examination of the epistemology of the field and a conscientious self-reappraisal will ultimately reposition the social sciences to play significant roles in the development of Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Rural Economies and Transitions to Capitalism: Germany and England Compared ( c.1200- c.1800).
- Author
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Ghosh, Shami
- Subjects
- *
FEUDALISM , *CAPITALISM , *AGRICULTURAL history , *PEASANTS , *ECONOMIC development , *INDUSTRIAL revolution , *HISTORY ,ECONOMIC conditions of developed countries - Abstract
Based on a synthesis of the empirical scholarship on England and Germany, this paper demonstrates that in both regions, rural socio-economic developments from c.1200 to c.1800 are similar: this period witnesses the rise to numerical predominance and growing economic significance of the 'sub-peasant classes', which had a growing impact on the market as a result of their increasing market dependence, and from which - towards the end of the period - a rural proletariat emerged. Against the influential theory of Robert Brenner, it is argued that the period c.1200- c.1400 cannot really be categorized as 'feudal' according to Brenner's definition; and 'agrarian capitalism' does not adequately describe the socio-economic system that obtained by the end of the sixteenth century. A genuine transition to capitalism is only evident from after c.1750, and can be found in Germany as well as in England; it is predicated both on ideological shifts and on the evolution of the rural proletariat, which is only found in large numbers by or after c.1800. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. AGRICULTURAL TRANSITION AND THE ADOPTION OF PRIMITIVE TECHNOLOGY.
- Author
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Ang, James B.
- Subjects
- *
ARCHITECTURE & technology , *INNOVATION adoption , *AGRICULTURAL productivity , *ECONOMIC development , *NEOLITHIC revolution , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper tests Jared Diamond's influential theory that an earlier transition from a hunter-gatherer society to agricultural production induces higher levels of technology adoption. Using a proxy for the geographic diffusion barriers of Neolithic technology and an index of biogeographic endowments to isolate the exogenous component of the timing of agricultural transition, the findings indicate that countries that experienced earlier transitions to agriculture were subsequently more capable of adopting new technologies in 1000 BC, 1 AD, and 1500 AD. These results lend strong support to Diamond's hypothesis. ( JEL O30, O40) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. ICT Policy and Implementation in Education: cases in Canada, Northern Ireland and Ireland.
- Author
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Austin, Roger and Hunter, Bill
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION & communication technologies , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *EDUCATIONAL innovations , *ECONOMIC development , *CROSS-cultural differences - Abstract
Countries with similar levels of economic development often implement different education ICT policies. Much of the existing research attributes such differences to economic and political factors. In this paper, we examine the development of ICT policy and implementation in the two parts of Ireland and in two Canadian provinces and find that historical, social and cultural differences also play an important role in the way ICT policies develop. In particular, we see differing historical perceptions of the role of the state and church in education playing a more important role than has hitherto been recognized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. From Spatial Keynesianism to Post-Fordist Neoliberalism: Emerging Contradictions in the Spatiality of the Irish State.
- Author
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Breathnach, Proinnsias
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *FORDISM , *POST-Fordism , *KEYNESIAN economics , *REGIONAL planning , *NEOLIBERALISM , *HISTORY , *ECONOMIC policy ,IRISH economy ,20TH century Irish history - Abstract
The transition from Fordism to post-Fordism has been accompanied by profound changes in the spatiality of west European states. The hierarchical, top-down and redistributive structures that typified the Fordist welfare state have been replaced by more complex spatial configurations as elements of economic and political power have shifted both downwards to subnational territorial levels and upwards to the supranational level. A major debate has developed around the nature of these emerging forms of state spatiality and of the processes underpinning their formation. This paper examines how these processes have operated in the particular case of the Republic of Ireland. Here, the spatiality of the state was founded on a peculiar post-colonial combination of a localised populist politics and a centralised state bureaucracy. While this arrangement was quite suited to the spatial dispersal of industrial branch plants which underpinned regional policy in the 1960s and 1970s, it has become increasingly problematic with the more recent emergence of new trends in the nature and locational preferences of inward investment. This is reflected in the profound conflicts that have attended the formulation and implementation of the National Spatial Strategy, introduced in 2002. The result is a national space economy whose increasing dysfunctionality may now be compromising the very development model upon which Ireland's recent spectacular economic growth has been built. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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