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List of Illustrations=xiv

Contributors=xvii

Preface=xxi

PART 1. The nature of development and development studies=1

1.1. Development in a global-historical context / Ruth Craggs=5

1.2. The Third World, developing countries, the South, emerging markets and rising powers / Klaus Dodds=10

1.3. The nature of development studies / Robert B. Potter=16

1.4. The impasse in development studies / Frans J. Schuurman=21

1.5. Development and economic growth / A. P. Thirlwall=25

1.6. Development and social welfare/human rights / Jennifer A. Elliott=28

1.7. Development as freedom / Patricia Northover=33

1.8. Race and development / Denise Ferreira da Silva=39

1.9. Culture and development / Susanne Schech=42

1.10. Ethics and development / Des Gasper=47

1.11. New institutional economics and development / Philipp Lepenies=51

1.12. Measuring development : From GDP to the HDI and wider approaches / Robert B. Potter=56

1.13. The measurement of poverty / Howard White=60

1.14. The millennium development goals / Jonathan Rigg=67

1.15. BRICS and development / José E. Cassiolato=73

PART 2. Theories and strategies of development=79

2.1. Theories, strategies and ideologies of development : An overview / Robert B. Potter=83

2.2. Smith, Ricardo and the world marketplace, 1776 to 2012 : Back to the future and beyond / David Sapsford=88

2.3. Enlightenment and the era of modernity / Marcus Power=95

2.4. Dualistic and unilinear concepts of development / Tony Binns=100

2.5. Neoliberalism : Globalization's neoconservative enforcer of austerity / Dennis Conway=106

2.6. Dependency theories : From ECLA to Andre Gunder Frank and beyond / Dennis Conway ; Nikolas Heynen=111

2.7. The New World Group of dependency scholars : Reflections of a Caribbean avant-garde movement / Don D. Marshall=116

2.8. World-systems theory : Core, semi-peripheral, and peripheral regions / Thomas Klak=121

2.9. Indigenous knowledge and development / John Briggs=127

2.10. Participatory development / Giles Mohan=131

2.11. Postcolonialism / Cheryl McEwan=137

2.12. Postmodernism and development / David Simon=142

2.13. Post-development / James D. Sidaway=147

2.14. Social capital and development / Anthony Bebbington ; Katherine E. Foo=152

PART 3. Globalisation, employment and development=157

3.1. Globalisation : An overview / Andrew Herod=161

3.2. The new international division of labour / Alan Gilbert=166

3.3. Global shift : Industrialization and development / Ray Kiely=174

3.4. Globalisation/localisation and development / Warwick E. Murray ; John Overton=178

3.5. Trade and industrial policy in developing countries / David Greenaway ; Chris Milner=183

3.6. The knowledge-based economy and digital divisions of labour / Mark Graham=189

3.7. Corporate social responsibility and development / Dorothea Kleine=195

3.8. The informal economy in cities of the South / Sylvia Chant=200

3.9. Child labour / Sally Lloyd-Evans=207

3.10. Migration and transnationalism / Katie D. Willis=212

3.11. Diaspora and development / Claire Mercer ; Ben Page=217

PART 4. Rural development=223

4.1. Rural poverty / Edward Heinemann=225

4.2. Rural livelihoods in a context of new scarcities / Annelies Zoomers=230

4.3. Food security / Richard Tiffin=235

4.4. Famine / Stephen Devereux=244

4.5. Genetically modified crops and development / Matin Qaim=249

4.6. Rural cooperatives : A new millennium? / Deborah R. Sick ; Baburao S. Baviskar ; Donald W. Attwood=254

4.7. Land reform / Ruth Hall ; Saturnino M. Borras Jr. ; Ben White=260

4.8. Gender, agriculture and land rights / Susie Jacobs=265

4.9. The sustainable intensification of agriculture / Jules Pretty=270

PART 5. Urbanization and development=275

5.1. Urbanization in low- and middle-income nations in Africa, Asia and Latin America / David Satterthwaite=279

5.2. Urban bias / Gareth A. Jones ; Stuart Corbridge=286

5.3. Global cities and the production of uneven development / Christof Parnreiter=291

5.4. Studies in comparative urbanism / Colin McFarlane=296

5.5. Prosperity or poverty? : Wealth, inequality and deprivation in urban areas / Carole Rakodi=299

5.6. Housing the urban poor / Alan Gilbert=306

5.7. Urbanization and environment in low- and middle-income nations / David Satterthwaite=310

5.8. Transport and urban development / Eduardo Alcantara Vasconcellos=319

5.9. Cities, crime and development / Paula Meth=324

PART 6. Environment and development=329

6.1. Sustainable development / Michael Redclift=333

6.2. International regulation and the environment / Giles Atkinson=336

6.3. Climate change and development / Emily Boyd=341

6.4. A changing climate and African development / Chukwumerije Okereke=346

6.5. Vulnerability and disasters / Terry Cannon=351

6.6. Ecosystem services and development / Tim Daw=356

6.7. Natural resource management : A critical appraisal / Jayalaxshmi Mistry=361

6.8. Water and hydropolitics / Jessica Budds ; Alex Loftus=365

6.9. Energy and development / Subhes C. Bhattacharyya=369

6.10. Tourism and environment / Matthew Louis Bishop=374

6.11. Transport and sustainability : Developmental pathways / Robin Hickman=378

PART 7. Gender and development=385

7.1. Demographic change and gender / Tiziana Leone ; Ernestina Coast=387

7.2. Women and the state / Kathleen Staudt=393

7.3. Gender, families and households / Ann Varley=397

7.4. Feminism and feminist issues in the South : A critique of the "development" paradigm / Madhu Purnima Kishwar=402

7.5. Rethinking gender and empowerment / Jane Parpart=407

7.6. Gender and globalisation / Harriot Beazley ; Vandana Desai=411

7.7. Migrant women in the new economy : Understanding the gender-migration-care nexus / Kavita Datta=416

7.8. Women and political representation / Shirin M. Rai=420

7.9. Sexuality and development / Andrea Cornwall=425

7.10. Indigenous fertility control / Tulsi Patel=430

PART 8. Health and education=437

8.1. Nutritional problems, policies and intervention strategies in developing economies / Prakash Shetty=441

8.2. Motherhood, mortality and health care / Maya Unnithan-Kumar=446

8.3. The development impacts of HIV/AIDS / Lora Sabin ; Marion McNabb ; Mary Bachman DeSilva=451

8.4. Ageing and poverty / Vandana Desai=457

8.5. Health disparity : From 'health inequality' to 'health inequity'―The move to a moral paradigm in global health disparity / Hazel R. Barrett=461

8.6. Disability / Ruth Evans=466

8.7. Social protection in development context / Sarah Cook ; Katja Hujo=470

8.8. Female participation in education / Christopher Colclough=475

8.9. The challenge of skill formation and training / Jeemol Unni=480

8.10. Development education, global citizenship and international volunteering / Matt Baillie Smith=485

PART 9. Political economy of violence and insecurity=491

9.1. Gender- and age-based violence / Cathy McIlwaine=493

9.2. Fragile states / Tom Goodfellow=499

9.3. Refugees / Richard Black ; Ceri Oeppen=503

9.4. Humanitarian aid / Phil O'Keefe ; Joanne Rose=507

9.5. Global war on terror, development and civil society / Jude Howell=513

9.6. Peace-building partnerships and human security / Timothy M. Shaw=517

9.7. Nationalism / Michel Seymour=521

9.8. Ethnic conflict and the state / Rajesh Venugopal=525

9.9. Religions and development / Emma Tomalin=529

PART 10. Governance and development=535

10.1. Foreign aid in a changing world / Stephen Brown=539

10.2. The rising powers as development donors and partners / Emma Mawdsley=543

10.3. Aid conditionality / Jonathan R. W. Temple=547

10.4. Aid effectiveness / Jonathan Glennie=551

10.5. Global governance issues and the current crisis / Isabella Massa ; José Brambila-Macias=555

10.6. Change agents : A history of hope in NGOs, civil society, and the 99% / Alison Van Rooy=559

10.7. Corruption and development / Susan Rose-Ackerman=564

10.8. The role of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) / Vandana Desai=568

10.9. Non-government public action networks and global policy processes / Barbara Rugendyke=573

10.10. Multilateral institutions : 'Developing countries' and 'emerging markets'―stability or change? / Morten Bøås=578

10.11. Is there a legal right to development? / Radha D'Souza=583

Index=587

Tables

1.6.1. The multidimensional and interdependent nature of human rights and human development=32

1.14.1. The MDGs, 1990-2015 : 8 goals, 18 targets (and 48 indicators)=69

1.14.2. MDG progress chart (2011)=70

1.14.3. Progress chart by region (2011)=71

2.2.1. Labour requirements matrix=90

3.4.1. Waves of globalization―a framework=180

3.4.2. Theses of globalization and development theories―a schema=181

3.10.1. The world's international migrants, 1970-2010=213

4.2.1. An overview of dominant concepts related to rural development policies since the 1950s=232

4.5.1. Average effects of Bt crops=252

5.1.1. The distribution of the world's urban population by region, 1950-2010 with projections to 2030 and 2050=280

5.1.2. The distribution of the world's largest cities by region over time=281

5.8.1. Transport mode carrying capacity (interrupted flow)=321

5.9.1. Homicide rates per 100,000 of the population in most populous city by country (alongside Gini coefficients measuring the extent of income distribution)=325

7.3.1. Percentage of household heads who are women (1995-2003)=399

7.3.2. Percentage of household heads who are women, by region and age, and percentage aged 60+, by region and sex (1997-2010)=401

8.7.1. Social assistance in developing countries : Selected programmes, objectives and impacts=472

9.1.1. Proportion of adult women experiencing physical and/or sexual violence by intimate partner and non-partner by rural/urban residence=494

9.1.2. Women's attitudes towards wife beating=495

Figures

1.1.1. The Kariba Dam=7

1.3.1. The various disciplines contributing to the cross-disciplinary field of development studies=17

1.13.1. 'Dollar a day' poverty by region, 1981-2005=63

1.13.2. Trends in infant and child mortality=64

2.1.1. A framework for considering development theories=84

2.4.1. Rostow's unilinear model=103

2.8.1. The world-system at the dawn of the twenty-first century=124

3.2.1. Income share of the rich in the US, excluding capital gains (%)=169

3.2.2. Average of government spending in 13 rich-world countries as % of GDP=171

3.6.1. A cartogram of all journals in Thompson Reuters' Web of Knowledge=191

3.6.2. Map of all geotagged Wikipedia articles in English=193

3.8.1. Informal breakfast business : Fajara, The Gambia=201

3.8.2. Pedal power : Informal transport in Mexico City=201

3.8.3. Segmentation by sex within the informal economy=203

3.10.1. Top ten recipients of migrant remittances, 2011 (US$ billions)=214

4.1.1. Rural poverty dynamics=228

4.3.1. Urban and rural population growth in developed, less developed and least developed countries=236

4.3.2. Changes in African food demand=237

4.3.3. Prevalence of vitamin A deficiency in preschool children=238

4.3.4. Length of growing period in the 2090s compared with the present=239

4.3.5. Distribution of water withdrawal between sectors=241

4.3.6. Agriculture and land use distribution―croplands and pasture lands=241

4.3.7. Wheat yields in Africa, 1960-2010=242

4.5.1. Global area grown with GM crops (1995-2011)=250

4.7.1. Painting by Boy Domingues (Philippines) 'The new enclosures' (2012)=260

5.3.1. Alpha world cities, 2010=293

5.7.1. Greenhouse gas emissions per person per year for selected cities (in tonnes of CO₂ equivalent)=311

5.8.1. Income and modal split, São Paulo, 2007=320

6.4.1. Percentage contribution of greenhouse gas according to regions=349

6.5.1. The PAR model=355

6.6.1. Linkages between ES and human wellbeing identified by the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005)=358

6.9.1. Global primary energy demand trend=371

6.9.2. Energy―GDP link=372

6.9.3. Energy-related global CO₂ emissions=373

6.11.1. Developmental pathways in transport=381

7.1.1. Population by age groups and sex (absolute numbers)=388

7.1.2. Sex ratio at birth=390

7.1.3. Life expectancy=391

8.3.1. The radiating effects of HIV/AIDS=452

8.3.2. The timing of impacts=453

8.8.1. Gender inequality and enrolments at primary level in developing countries. Where enrolment rates are low, boys are given preference in most countries and most regions=477

8.8.2. Sub-Saharan Africa : The proportion of female teachers at primary level, and the gender balance of first grade intakes (a value of 1.00 indicates gender parity in enrolments). Where female teachers are a small proportion of the total, many fewer girls than boys enrol in school=479

9.1.1. Police officers=496

9.4.1. Resource flows within the international relief system=510

10.1.1. Twenty-first century development cooperation=540

10.6.1. Describing the NGO=560

10.6.2. Describing the CSO=561

10.6.3. Defining the 99%=562

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The Companion to Development Studies contains over a hundred chapters written by leading international experts within the field to provide a concise and authoritative overview of the key theoretical and practical issues dominating contemporary development studies. Covering a wide range of disciplines the book is divided into ten sections, each prefaced by a section introduction written by the editors. The sections cover: the nature of development, theories and strategies of development, globalization and development, rural development, urbanization and development, environment and development, gender, health and education, the political economy of violence and insecurity, and governance and development.

This third edition has been extensively updated and contains 45 new contributions from leading authorities, dealing with pressing contemporary issues such as race and development, ethics and development, BRICs and development, global financial crisis, the knowledge based economy and digital divide, food security, GM crops, comparative urbanism, cities and crime, energy, water hydropolitics, climate change, disability, fragile states, global war on terror, ethnic conflict, legal rights to development, ecosystems services for development, just to name a few. Existing chapters have been thoroughly revised to include cutting-edge developments, and to present updated further reading and websites.

The Companion to Development Studies presents concise overviews providing a gateway to further reading and a flexible resource for teaching and learning. It has established a role as essential reading for all students of development studies, as well as those in cognate areas of geography, international relations, politics, sociology, anthropology and economics.



The Companion to Development Studies offers a cutting-edge overview of the field of development studies from leading international academics.