TY - CHAP
T1 - Development Discourse and Practice: Alternatives and New Directions from Postcolonial Perspectives
AU - Donnelly, Paul
AU - Özkazanç-Pan, Banu
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Paul F. Donnelly and Banu Özkazanç-Pan 2014.
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Development and aid programs, such as those aimed at promoting economic growth and prosperity in ‘Third World’ nations and transition economies, often arise out of Western and neo-liberal policy ideologies and practices. These programs may, in some cases, provide useful guidelines for restructuring institutional structures and governance mechanisms in nations that have long struggled with poverty, economic instability, health crises, and social and political turmoil. However, a growing number of critical voices are raising concerns over the guiding assumptions and inclusiveness of these policies and programs in their aims to promote economic development and social well-being in non-Western nations. We join these critical perspectives by way of postcolonial frameworks to highlight some of the problematic assumptions and oversights of development programs, while offering new alternatives and directions. By doing so, we contribute to organizational theorizing in a global context, as postcolonial insights provide much needed engagement with international aid policies and programs, as well as development organizations and institutions. To accomplish this, we offer a historical perspective on development, present a critique of the policies and practices guiding many aid programs, and conclude with suggestions emanating from postcoloniality.
AB - Development and aid programs, such as those aimed at promoting economic growth and prosperity in ‘Third World’ nations and transition economies, often arise out of Western and neo-liberal policy ideologies and practices. These programs may, in some cases, provide useful guidelines for restructuring institutional structures and governance mechanisms in nations that have long struggled with poverty, economic instability, health crises, and social and political turmoil. However, a growing number of critical voices are raising concerns over the guiding assumptions and inclusiveness of these policies and programs in their aims to promote economic development and social well-being in non-Western nations. We join these critical perspectives by way of postcolonial frameworks to highlight some of the problematic assumptions and oversights of development programs, while offering new alternatives and directions. By doing so, we contribute to organizational theorizing in a global context, as postcolonial insights provide much needed engagement with international aid policies and programs, as well as development organizations and institutions. To accomplish this, we offer a historical perspective on development, present a critique of the policies and practices guiding many aid programs, and conclude with suggestions emanating from postcoloniality.
KW - International Business
KW - International Development
KW - International Monetary Fund
KW - Knowledge Transfer
KW - Poverty Reduction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=86000311002&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1057/9781137471628_5
DO - 10.1057/9781137471628_5
M3 - Chapter
SN - 978-1-349-50103-8
T3 - Humanism in Business Series
SP - 55
EP - 67
BT - Humanism in Business Series
A2 - Lupton, Nathaniel C.
A2 - Pirson, Michael
PB - Palgrave Macmillan UK
ER -