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Routledge Handbook of Global Development [Hardback]

Edited by (James Cook University, Australia), Edited by , Edited by (Malawi University of Science and Technology.), Edited by (The University of Newcastle, Australia.), Edited by (University of the South Pacific, ), Edited by , Edited by (University of Manchester, UK.), Edited by , Edited by (University of Wollongong, Australia.)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 750 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 453 g, 20 Tables, black and white; 13 Line drawings, black and white; 22 Halftones, black and white; 35 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Routledge International Handbooks
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367862026
  • ISBN-13: 9780367862022
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 750 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 453 g, 20 Tables, black and white; 13 Line drawings, black and white; 22 Halftones, black and white; 35 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sērija : Routledge International Handbooks
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Feb-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367862026
  • ISBN-13: 9780367862022
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This Handbook provides a comprehensive analysis of some of the worlds most pressing global development challenges including how they may be better understood and addressed through innovative practices and approaches to learning and teaching.

Featuring 61 contributions from leading and emerging academics and practitioners, this multidisciplinary volume is organized into five thematic parts exploring: changes in global development financing, ideologies, norms and partnerships; interrelationships between development, natural environments and inequality; shifts in critical development challenges, and; new possibilities for positive change. Collectively, the handbook demonstrates that global development challenges are becoming increasingly complex and multi-faceted and are to be found in the Global North as much as the South. It draws attention to structural inequality and disadvantage alongside possibilities for positive change.

The Handbook will serve as a valuable resource for students and scholars across multiple disciplines including Development Studies, Anthropology, Geography, Global Studies, Indigenous and Postcolonial Studies, Political Science, and Urban Studies.

The Introduction of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at http://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

Recenzijas

"This path-breaking Handbook moves thinking from its conventional international development approach to a genuinely global development framing. Drawing on contributions from a diverse and broad-based set of authors (not just the usual suspects) it examines todays big issues sustainability and inequality and explores the war of ideas that is needed if we are to reimagine and redirect human and planetary futures. The Handbooks chapters powerfully critique the retroliberalism that shapes contemporary policy and action and introduce the reader to emancipatory and transformative ways of understanding global problems and changing what individuals, communities, businesses and states can do. This is a must-have-on-my-bookshelf publication."

David Hulme, Professor of Development Studies at the University of Manchester, Executive Director of the Global Development Institute; CEO of the Effective States and Inclusive Development Research Centre, UK

"Gradual changes in the political economy of the global order and the unprecedented increase in climate, health and biodiversity risk demands a collective rethink of the fundamentals of international development. In this watershed contribution, that not only distils problems of the current development machine but charts new ways ahead, the Handbook of Global Development is provocative and inspiring. Drawing from a new generation of development leadership and foregrounding fresh voices from the across the world, the book breaks new ground by setting out new modes of thinking supranationally, alternative ways of acting on transnational grand challenges and lays out innovative teaching approaches that, taken together, reshape the paradigm of global connections and challenges."

Susan Parnell, Global Challenges Research Professor in the School of Geography at the University of Bristol and Emeritus Professor at the African Centre for Cities (ACC) at the University of Cape Town

"This is a timely and invaluable handbook for anyone working in global development, or anyone wishing to. The contexts, actors, narratives, and challenges shaping development are constantly changing. It is incumbent on all of us from students to the more experienced to continually consider our own practice and positionality. Are we really doing good for the worlds poorest and most disadvantaged? How can we do better? By taking a wide-ranging, multi-disciplinary approach, and explicitly addressing critical cross-cutting issues such as climate change, inequality and population growth, the chapters in this volume provide a rich resource to guide ongoing reflection and learning on these difficult questions. I cant recommend it highly enough."

Praveena Gunaratnam, DrPH, Global Public Health Specialist and Human Rights Activist

"This book is a valuable guide through a range of pressing issues for policy experts and students alike, who are grappling with the future of development from within and beyond the sector. Its established and emerging authors explore big questions like what to make of deglobalisation, changing donor systems and aid chains, and whether neoliberalism is really dead or just evolving. The book is a must-read for practitioners and scholars aiming to keep ahead of global trends, like the future of development finance and sustainable development."

Dr Amrita Malhi, Senior Advisor Geoeconomics, Save the Children

"The Routledge Handbook of Global Development stands poignantly at the cutting-edge of new thinking on challenges, prospects, possibilities, and desired development futures. Contributors have done a splendid job in bringing to the fore of academia and public policy the most recent challenges of Anthropocene and existentialism, extractivism and violence of development, migration and Covid-19, decolonization and many other topical themes; opening up important epistemological questions in the field of global development. This is a must-read Handbook and resource for scholars and policymakers alike, which fundamentally refreshes and nourishes the mind of all those who care to know the state of the world we live-in."

Professor Dr. Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni, Chair of Epistemologies of the Global South, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Africa Multiple Cluster of Excellence, University of Bayreuth

"This Handbook provides an invaluable resource for all those concerned with contemporary global challenges. It goes beyond the usual description of the worlds problems to address head on the ways in which these can be addressed through pedagogy, policy and practice. Importantly, in making a critical intervention into a field that is currently in flux it reveals shifting geographies of power and global relations. This truly international and interdisciplinary volume includes contributions from leading scholars in their field that illuminate the multiple influences and dynamics of contemporary development thinking and practice. It moves beyond despondency, to provide innovative and more hopeful engagements with global concerns, ones that can work towards advancing more equitable and sustainable futures. This Handbook encourages us to reflect more deeply on the ideologies and practices that have for so long characterised international development and development studies."

Professor Uma Kothari, Professor of Migration and Postcolonial Studies, Global Development Institute, University of Manchester, UK

List of figures
xiii
List of tables
xv
List of contributors
xvi
Introduction 1(12)
Kearrin Sims
Nicola Banks
Susan Engel
Paul Hodge
Jonathan Makuwira
Naohiro Nakamura
Jonathan Rigg
Albert Salamanca
Pichamon Yeophantong
PART 1 Changing development configurations
13(128)
1 Introduction: changing development configurations
15(5)
Susan Engel
Kearrin Sims
2 Deglobalization
20(13)
Walden Bello
3 Retroliberalism and development
33(14)
Warwick E. Murray
John Overton
4 Development in the Global North
47(12)
Etienne Nel
5 Debt
59(12)
Eric Toussaint
6 OECD DAC development cooperation
71(11)
Heiner Janus
7 South-South Cooperation
82(11)
Laura Trajber Waisbich
Emma Mawdsley
8 Multilateral development banks: old and new
93(13)
Susan Engel
Patrick Bond
9 Northern and Southern non-governmental organizations
106(13)
Nicola Banks
Badru Bukenya
10 Philanthropy
119(10)
Linsey McGoey
11 Social enterprise and inclusive economic development
129(12)
Narayan Gopalkrishnan
Hurriyet Babacan
PART 2 Sustainability and the environment
141(162)
12 Introduction: sustainability and development
143(4)
Albert Salamanca
Pichamon Yeophantong
13 Planetary boundaries
147(11)
Ilan Kelman
14 Anthropocene, Capitalocene, and climate change
158(12)
Antonio G. M. La Vina
Jameela Joy M. Reyes
15 More-than-human development
170(13)
Andrew McGregor
Asltraful Alam
16 Gender, sexuality, and environment
183(14)
Susie Jolly
17 Extractivism
197(10)
Henry Veltmeyer
18 Resource conflict
207(14)
Feifei Cai
Pichamon Yeophantong
19 The extinction crisis
221(12)
Hilary Whitehouse
20 Transnational environmental crime and development
233(12)
Lorraine Elliott
21 Indigenous rights, new technology and the environment
245(13)
Pyrou Chung
Mia Chung
22 Sustainable food systems
258(11)
Sango Mahaiity
23 Renewable energy
269(11)
Eko Priyo Purnomo
Aqil Teguh Eatliani
Abitassha Az Zahra
24 Transboundary governance failures and Southeast Asia's plastic pollution
280(10)
Danny Marks
25 Sustainable development discourse
290(13)
Thomas McNamara
PART 3 Inequality and inequitable development
303(142)
26 Introduction: inequality and inequitable development
305(6)
Kearrin Sims
Jonathan Rigg
27 Poverty: no meeting of minds
311(15)
Jonathan Rigg
Kearrin Sims
28 Global financial systems and tax avoidance
326(15)
Rachel Etter-Phoya
Moran Harari
Markus Meinzer
Miwslav Palansky
29 Global extractivism and inequality
341(10)
Etiemie Roy Gregoire
Pascale Hatcher
30 Spatial inequality and development
351(11)
Edo Andriesse
Kristian Saguin
31 Land grabbing and exclusion
362(10)
Philip Hirsch
32 Forced displacement and resettlement
372(10)
Diana Suliardiman
33 Human mobility and climate change
382(10)
Andreas Neef
Lucy Benge
34 Educational inequality and development
392(13)
Youyenn Teo
35 Gender inequality and development
405(13)
Archana Preeti Voola
Bina Fernandez
36 Gender inequality and development pedagogy
418(13)
Sara N. Amin
Christian Girard
Domenica Gisella Calabro
37 Violent development in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region
431(14)
Anna Hayes
Kearrin Sims
PART 4 Game changers of Global Development?
445(142)
38 Introduction: game changers of Global Development?
447(8)
Nicola Banks
Jonathan Makuwira
39 COVID-19 and global health systems
455(14)
Stephanie M. Topp
40 Health and illness
469(11)
Pranee Liamputtong
Zoe Sanipreeya Rice
41 Disability-inclusive development
480(13)
Jonathan Makuwira
42 Citizenship, rights, and global development
493(12)
Diana Mitlin
Jack Makau
Sophie King
Tom Gillespie
43 Housing and development
505(11)
Poonam Pritika Devi
Naohiro Nakamura
44 Global value chains and development
516(17)
Aarti Krishnan
45 International and internal migration
533(12)
Tanja Bastia
Ronald Skeldon
46 Forced migration and asylum seeking
545(10)
Joseph Besigye Bazirakc
Carolina Suransky
47 Development and conflict
555(11)
Jessica R. Hawkins
48 Children, youth, and development
566(10)
Vandra Harris Agisilaou
49 Ageing and development
576(11)
Penny Vera-Sanso
PART 5 Reimagining futures
587(138)
50 Introduction: reimagining futures
589(4)
Paul Hodge
Naohiro Nakamura
51 Finding perspective through our more-than-human kin
593(12)
Michelle Bishop
Lauren Tynan
52 Activism and development studies pedagogy
605(12)
Tolu Muliaina
53 Tensions of decolonizing development pedagogies
617(12)
Bernard Kelly-Edwards
Kevin Gavi Duncan
Paul Hodge
54 Decolonial gender and development
629(12)
Yvonne Underhill-Sem
55 Community based service learning for development
641(12)
Rebecca Bilous
Laura Hammersley
Kate Lloyd
56 Capacity development and higher education
653(12)
Krishna Kumar Kotra
Naohiro Nakamura
57 Adaptive programming, politics and learning in development
665(13)
Aidan Craney
Lisa Denney
David Hudson
Ujjwal Krishna
58 Southern research methodologies for development
678(11)
Johanna Bruginaii Alvarez
Leakhana Kol
59 Community economies
689(11)
Jenny Cameron
Isaac Lyne
60 Geonarratives and countermapped storytelling
700(13)
Joseph Palis
61 Poetry as decolonial praxis
713(12)
Sarah Wright
Index 725
Kearrin Sims is a lecturer in Development Studies at James Cook University, Australia.

Nicola Banks is a senior lecturer in Global Urbanism and Urban Development at the Global Development Institute, University of Manchester.

Susan Engel is an associate professor in Politics and International Studies at the University of Wollongong, Australia.

Paul Hodge is a senior lecturer in Geography and Environmental Studies at The University of Newcastle, Australia.

Jonathan Makuwira is a professor in Development Studies and Deputy Vice Chancellor of Malawi University of Science and Technology.

Naohiro Nakamura is a senior lecturer in Geography at the University of the South Pacific, Fiji.

Jonathan Rigg is a professor in Geography at the University of Bristol, UK.

Albert Salamanca is a senior research fellow at the Stockholm Environment Institutes Asia Centre, Thailand.

Pichamon Yeophantong is a senior lecturer at the University of New South Wales, Canberra.