Implementing Inequality Implementing Inequality

Implementing Inequality

The Invisible Labor of International Development

    • USD 36.99
    • USD 36.99

Descripción editorial

Implementing Inequality argues that the international development industry’s internal dynamics—between international and national staff, and among policy makers, administrators, and implementers—shape interventions and their outcomes as much as do the external dynamics of global political economy. Through an ethnographic study in postwar Angola, the book demonstrates how the industry’s internal social pressures guide development’s methods and goals, introducing the innovative concept of the development implementariat: those in-country workers, largely but not exclusively “local” staff members, charged with carrying out development’s policy prescriptions. The implementariat is central to the development endeavor but remains overlooked and under-supported as most of its work is deeply social, interactive, and relational, the kind of work that receives less recognition and support than it deserves at every echelon of the industry. If international development is to meet its larger purpose, it must first address its internal inequalities of work and professional class.

 

GÉNERO
Política y actualidad
PUBLICADO
2020
17 de enero
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
200
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Rutgers University Press
VENDEDOR
Chicago Distribution Center
TAMAÑO
4.8
MB