Shifting Perspectives on Development: An Actor-Network Study of a Dam in Costa Rica (Report) Shifting Perspectives on Development: An Actor-Network Study of a Dam in Costa Rica (Report)

Shifting Perspectives on Development: An Actor-Network Study of a Dam in Costa Rica (Report‪)‬

Anthropological Quarterly 2010, Fall, 83, 4

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Publisher Description

I. Introduction The anthropological study of development, anthropology's "evil twin" (Ferguson 1997a), has gained increasing importance and recognition as a distinct subfield of anthropology as a discipline. Lewis and Mosse (2006) distinguish three approaches in the anthropology of development: (a.) instrumental ones, which promote social progress through the means of more effective development interventions, institutional reforms, or the establishment of new methods; (b.) deconstructivist approaches, which criticize development politics and economics as a distinct hegemonic discourse (Escobar 1995, Ferguson 1997b, Sachs 1992); and (c.) sociological interactionism, which promotes a sociology of development based on the empirical investigation of the interactions between developers, developees, and the "brokers" in between (Arce and Long 2000; Bierschenk, Chauveau, and Olivier de Sardan 1999; Olivier de Sardan 2005). This paper takes some insights from Actor-Network Theory (ANT) to show, first, how these three approaches can be combined to give a more complex picture of development processes, and second, that each one of them reflects the perspectives of actors' positions in the development context.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2010
September 22
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
33
Pages
PUBLISHER
Institute for Ethnographic Research
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
229.1
KB
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