Synopses & Reviews
World poverty and development are more salient than ever on the global political agenda. The campaigns of the global justice movement, the growing securitization of development in the aftermath of 9-11, the intensification of global inequality, and the perceived threats of global pandemics, migrations and failed states have contributed to a sense of renewed urgency.
The contributors to this volume, including Bjorn Hettne, Fantu Cheru, Jeffrey Haynes and Bonny Ibhawah, share a common intellectual aspiration to re-unite the study of development with the study of international relations or global politics as it is more broadly conceived today. Although globalization has transformed the context of development, it has yet to significantly transform for the better the prospects for real development or human security amongst the worlds most vulnerable communities.
Whether globalization, development and human security are inescapably trapped within a vicious circle or a virtuous cycle is the central concern of this book.
The volume will be importance to student of development studies, international relations and politics, globalization and economics.
Review
"As a whole, but also in terms of its individual chapter contributions, this collection very much succeeds in telling its readership something important and unforgettable about the changing processes of international relations."
Development and Change
"Focusing on key issues of inequality and development such as health, international debt and human rights, Globalization, Development and Human Security provides the reader with sophisticated analyses of the challenges that globalization is posing for development in the contemporary world. Students and interested readers alike will gain from reading this book."
Shirin M. Rai, University of Warwick
"There has been a permanent restructuring of the global political economy, to such an extent that the fundamental ways in which we approach 'development' must be overhauled. This book performs a signal and valuable service in helping us do that. Anthony McGrew's incisive Introduction lays bare an agenda which the book addresses in a series of fine essays."
Stephen Chan, School of Oriental and African Studies
"Globalization, Development and Human Security offers a penetrating and wide-ranging look at the global politics of what used to be called 'the third world' and the ways in which globalization has reframed the development project. It deals with some very established themes ? foreign aid, gender and democratization among them ? as well as HIV/AIDS, human rights and the politics of grass roots contention. A collection to be recommended to students and researchers alike."
Jean Grugel, University of Sheffield
About the Author
Anthony McGrew, Professor of International Relations, University of Southampton
Nana Poku, Director of Research, Commission on HIV/AIDS and Governance in Africa
Table of Contents
Notes on Contributors
PrefaceAbbreviations and AcronymsIntroduction Part 1 – Globalization and the Transformed Context of Development Chapter 1 Globalism, Regionalism and Interregionalism Bjorn Hettne Chapter 2 Foreign Aid: Reports of its Death Greatly Exaggerated Peter Burnell Chapter 3 The Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative: Old Wine in a New Bottle? Fantu Cheru Chapter 4 Globalisation and Democracy in the Developing World Jeffrey Haynes Part 2- Globalization, Development and Human Security Chapter 5 Globalisation and Human Security Caroline Thomas Chapter 6Health in Development Sandra J. MacLean Chapter 7 HIV/AIDS in a Globalised World: An Uneven pandemic in an Unequal World Nana K. Poku Chapter 8 Transformation and Constriction: Globalisation and Human Rights in the Third World Bonny Ibhawah Chapter 9 The Political Economy of Globalisation and Grassroots Movements Dong-Sook S. Gills Chapter 10Gender, Power and Governance in a Globalising World Jane Parpart Index