Description
Product ID: | 9781789201338 |
Product Form: | Paperback / softback |
Country of Manufacture: | GB |
Title: | Management by Seclusion |
Subtitle: | A Critique of World Bank Promises to End Global Poverty |
Authors: | Author: Glynn Cochrane |
Page Count: | 190 |
Subjects: | Development studies, Development studies, Poverty and precarity, Social and cultural anthropology, Political economy, Poverty & unemployment, Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography, Political economy |
Description: | Select Guide Rating Assessing the World Bank's attempts to combat global poverty over the past 50 years, anthropologist and former World Bank Advisor Glynn Cochrane argues that instead of the Bank's prevailing strategy of "management by seclusion," poverty alleviation requires personal engagement with the poorest by helpers with hands-on local and cultural skills. 50 years ago, World Bank President Robert McNamara promised to end poverty. Alleviation was to rely on economic growth, resulting in higher incomes stimulated by Bank loans processed by deskbound Washington staff, trickling down to the poorest. Instead, child poverty and homelessness are on the increase everywhere. In this book, anthropologist and former World Bank Advisor Glynn Cochrane argues that instead of Washington’s “management by seclusion,” poverty alleviation requires personal engagement with the poorest by helpers with hands-on local and cultural skills. Here, the author argues, the insights provided by anthropological fieldwork have a crucial role to play. |
Imprint Name: | Berghahn Books |
Publisher Name: | Berghahn Books |
Country of Publication: | GB |
Publishing Date: | 2019-05-03 |