Participation: The New Tyranny?Bill Cooke, Uma Kothari Bloomsbury Academic, 2001 - 207 من الصفحات This book is about participatory development's potential for tyranny, showing how it can lead to the unjust and illegitimate exercise of power. It is the first book-length treatment to address the gulf between the almost universally fashionable rhetoric of participation, which promises empowerment and appropriate development on the one hand, and what actually happens when consultants and activists promote and practise participatory development, on the other. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 47
... NGOs John Hailey Introduction This chapter raises questions about the role and purpose of the formulaic approaches to participative decision - making that have been promoted and even imposed by donors and other development partners . It ...
... NGOs . This research had been commissioned by the Aga Khan Foundation of Canada , and detailed case studies have been prepared on such NGOs as : BRAC and Proshika in Bangladesh , BAIF and Sadguru in India , and AKRSP and IUCN in ...
... NGO managers and staff or local people is a product of the society and context in which these NGOs operate . This is a context partly shaped by the local culture and associated political systems , partly by their financial dependence on ...
المحتوى
The Case for Participation as Tyranny I | 1 |
Institutions Agency and the Limitations of Participatory | 36 |
Boxes Tables and Figures | 41 |
حقوق النشر | |
13 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة