100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Lecture notes International Development (2021-22) R176,99   Add to cart

Class notes

Lecture notes International Development (2021-22)

2 reviews
 68 views  5 purchases
  • Course
  • Institution

This is a document consisting of all lecture notes for the course International Development. Using these as my main study material, I was able to achieve a 7 in the final exam.

Preview 4 out of 52  pages

  • May 11, 2022
  • 52
  • 2021/2022
  • Class notes
  • Jonathan philips
  • All classes

2  reviews

review-writer-avatar

By: zaraanahit • 1 year ago

review-writer-avatar

By: harry31_9 • 2 year ago

avatar-seller
L1 – WHAT IS DEVELOPMENT?
COURSE INTRO
Using tools of polisci to:
 Explain why some places are more developed than others
 Diagnose why development initiatives often fail
 Propose solutions that have proven evidence of success in boosting development
Politics – how public decisions are made; who gets what, when and how (Lasswell)
WHAT IS DEVELOPMENT?
Development = freedom (reading)
“Bringing to the dark places of the earth, the abode of barbarism and cruelty, the torch of culture and
progress” – Lugard, 1926
“The manner in which people are able to live and die” – Dasgupta, 1993
“The modification of the biosphere to improve the quality of human life” – IUCN, 1980
“Good change” – Chambers, 2004
“The practice of development agencies” – Thomas, 2004
“Since development depends on values and alternative conceptions of good life, there is no uniform or
unique answer” – Kanbur, 2006
 Who are we developing?
o The 3rd world? Underdeveloped? Less developed? Developing? Low and middle
income? The global South? Everyone?
 What are we developing?
o Economic development e.g. GDP, political development e.g. democracy, social
development e.g. healthcare, subjective development e.g. personal wellbeing and
happiness
Modernisation theory – a linear transition from the same ‘traditional’ start to the same ‘modern’ end
Subjective development: voices of the poor
 The rich are those who are able to save & sell part of their harvest when prices rise (Niger) 
economic activity
 What one shouldn’t lack is the sheep, what one cannot live without is food grain (China)
 Most important asset is an extended and well placed family network from which one can
derive jobs, credit and financial assistance (Senegal)  network
 Poverty is humiliation, the sense of being dependent and forced to accept rudeness, insults and
indifference when asking for help (Latvia)  hierarchy & power
Development as freedom (Sen)
 Freedom to do what?
o Participate in politics, engage in economic transactions, social opportunities through
education and healthcare, transparency during interactions, security of life
 What limits freedom?
o Poverty, violence/repression, poor public services, state restriction on activities, lack
of opportunities
 Why does freedom matter?
o Intrinsic reason: freedom matters in itself
o Instrumental reason: freedoms promote other freedoms
o E.g. democracy prevents famine…but also matters for political freedom in itself

, o E.g. markets promote wealth…but also represent economic freedom itself
 Development is about complementaries, not trade-offs
 Freedom = capabilities (e.g. to live a long life, to become a teacher)
o Capabilities depend on resources/commodities
o And on needs: how resources are converted into capabilities





Freedom vs income: income is not enough as not all ends can be bought
 Freedom vs utility/happiness: people who are easily pleased do not deserve less
 Freedom vs libertarianism: freedom ‘from’ doesn’t guarantee freedom ‘to’
 HDR (UN): new dimensions/freedoms of importance change/are adapted
 How do we choose which capabilities/freedoms matter?
o For Sen, this is the purpose of democracy
o But he still proposes his 5 freedoms
o How do we choose for countries under authoritarianism?
 Not just a normative question
o Politics is the conflict between people with interests in different dimensions of
development
Sustainable development – development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the
ability of future generations to meet their own needs (Brundtland commission)
 Sustainability means renewable resources are
extracted/consumed at a slower rate than they are replaced
 Strong sustainability: natural capital does not fall
 Weak sustainability: the sum of natural and physical capital
does not fall
 Are continued economic growth and environmental
sustainability compatible?
o The “development” route to sustainability
 Rapid tech innovation helps us solve
problems like climate change
 Wealth and education reduce fertility, reducing environmental pressures
 The Kuznets curve
o The “sustainability” route to development
 Tackling environmental challenges will stimulate new innovation and
investment
 Conserving assets improves their productivity e.g. new medical cures in the
rainforest
 Avoiding climate stresses prevents conflicts and boosts yields
o These approaches are blurred and complicated
 What conflicts in ‘freedoms’ lie behind the debate on financing new natural gas projects in
developing countries?
o Economic, political (on both sides), economic autonomy  states having political
decision-making power to be independent (financially),
Post development critiques
 The discourse of development makes people think of themselves as ‘underdeveloped’
o Rejecting modernisation theory: we’re not all traveling in the same direction, more is
not always better
o Poverty is a myth, a construct and the invention of a particular civilisation
 Development is an imposition of power and hierarchy
o A weapon of the cold war and post colonialism

, o Development as planned poverty
o A top-down, ethnocentric and technocratic approach
o Westernisation and eradicating diversity
 Development has failed on its own terms
o Rising inequality
o Delusions and disappointment, failures and crimes have been steady companions of
development and tell a common story: it did not work
 Development is an industry
o $152.8Bil
o Govts, NGOs, BINGOs, profit oriented companies, foundations
o Reliant on the continuation of poverty
o Lobbying govts for new contracts
o Govts seeking markets for their companies
Is it time to replace the concept of development?
HOW DO WE MEASURE DEVELOPMENT?
Challenges to measurement
 Multidimensional, frequent
 Lack of data collection capacity on most important countries
 Representative data on the most vulnerable is challenging
 Hard to attribute progress to specific policies when many things change at the same time
HDI (UN):




 More income helps, but can’t compensate for poor health; HDI depends on all indicators being
of a particular ranking; all dimensions need to be paid attention to
Multidimensional poverty index
 Are the people who lack
income the same people
who lack healthcare?
 We add up how many of the
10 indicators you lack; if
you are deprived of at least
1/3 of the indicators, you are
considered poor (need to
face multiple challenges to
be considered poor)
consequence: MPI helps us capture the multiple challenge of escaping poverty
Sustainability
HDI and MPI reward resource use but ignore consequences for future generations.

, Ecological footprint: how much biologically productive area it takes to provide for all competing
demands of people (in Hectares)
1.75 earths would be needed to support current activities, 5 if we all lived like the US
ARE WE MAKING PROGRESS IN DEVELOPMENT?
Data, its production and interpretation are crucial to developing solutions to these problems.
Did we achieve the MDGs?
 Achieved 5/17 targets; not terrible, but not particularly good
 Did incredibly well in reducing absolute poverty, decrease seems more rapid each decade;
absolute number of people in poverty has shown extreme decline (2/3 reduction; especially in
China)
o But Africa has more people living in poverty and it is only increasing
 Countries making fastest progress in reducing multidimensional poverty are all African
CONCLUSION
What is development?
 Contested: development as many possible freedoms
 Increasingly a question of sustainability and freedom of future generations
 What people value as development generates competing political interests
How do we measure it?
 Many imperfect measures; all are simplifications and make difficult value judgements
Are we making progress?
 Quickly, but unevenly and decelerating
 Poverty increasingly concentrated in Africa




L2 – GEOGRAPHY
WHERE IN THE WORLD IS LEAST DEVELOPED?
By far, greatest concentration of poverty is in central Africa. In general, most of Africa faces a great
challenge, followed by South Asia.
6/7 impoverished people live either in Africa or India
HOW DOES GEOGRAPHY AFFECT DEVELOPMENT?
Some countries are doomed not to develop (Hausmann)
 Tropical: 1.5% points slower growth & 7 years lower life expectancy
 Landlocked: 0.6% points slower growth
Why?
1. Transportation and coordination costs limit trade and globalisation

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through EFT, credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying this summary from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller yvakapashi. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy this summary for R176,99. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

76669 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy summaries for 14 years now

Start selling
R176,99  5x  sold
  • (2)
  Buy now