Synopses & Reviews
A systematic reassessment, by two leading figures in the field, of the paradigm of international development in both theory and practice. It offers an overview and critique of development theory and strategy, and a new framework for the analysis of global inequality, poverty and development in an era of globalization.
About the Author
Dr. Mark T. Berger is Director of the US-México Security-Development Partnership Project and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Defense Analysis at the Naval Postgraduate School, USA. He has published and taught widely on development and security issues, international studies and modern international history. His latest books include
The Crisis of Global Modernity and the
Fate of Humanity: From a World of Empires to a World of Sovereign Nation-States to a New Global Order for the 21st Century (Forthcoming: 2014).
Heloise Weber is Senior Lecturer in International Relations and Development at the University of Queensland, Australia. She researches and publishes on the global politics of development and inequalities, and poverty reduction strategies, including on theoretical and methodological aspects. She is co-editor (with M. T. Berger) of Recognition and Redistribution: Beyond International Development (Routledge 2013) and editor of Politics of Development (Routledge, 2014). She is currently working on a monograph on the global politics of microcredit and poverty.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: International Development, World Politics and Global Modernity
2. Global Modernity and International Development: The Origins of the Third World
3. Third World Rising: Decolonization, the Cold War and Third Worldism
4. The Golden Age of Third Worldism: International Development, the Cold War and the Contradictions of Global Modernity
5. Third Worldism in Decline: International Development, the End of the Cold War and the Crisis of Global Modernity
6. The Resurrection of Nation-Building and Modernization: Security and International Development in the Third World after the Cold War
7. A New Agenda for Negotiating Global Modernity: A Regional Development-Security Framework After Third Worldism
8. Conclusion: Rethinking the Third World