Foreword
Part I: Preliminaries and Principles
1. The World Bank, Neoliberalism and Development Research, by Elisa Van Waeyenberge, Ben Fine and Kate Bayliss
2. A Knowledge Bank? by Elisa Van Waeyenberge and Ben Fine
Part II: Research in Practice
3. Understanding Aid at the Bank, by Elisa Van Waeyenberge
4. A Cup Half Full: The World Bank's Assessment of Water Privatisation, by Kate Bayliss
5. Social Capital and Health, by Ben Fine
6. World Bank Research on HIV/AIDS: Praise Where It's Due?, by Deborah Johnston
7. Agriculture in the World Bank: Blighted Harvest Persists, by Carlos Oya
8. A Policy Wrapped in 'Analysis' - The World Bank's Case for Foreign Banks, by Paulo L dos Santos
9. Hard Science or Waffly Crap? Evidence-Based Policy versus Policy Based Evidence in the Field of Violent Conflict, by Christopher Cramer and Jonathan Goodhand
10. The Washington Consensus and the China Anomaly, by Dic Lo
Part III: Continuity or Change?
11. Whither World Bank Research?, by Ben Fine, Elisa Van Waeyenberge and Kate Bayliss
References
Index
Any student, academic or practitioner wanting to succeed in development studies, radical or mainstream, must understand the World Bank's role and the evolution of its thinking and activities. The Political Economy of Development provides tools for gaining this understanding and applies them across a range of topics.
The research, practice and scholarship of development are always set against the backdrop of the World Bank, whose formidable presence shapes both development practice and thinking. This book brings together academics that specialise in different subject areas of development and reviews their findings in the context of the World Bank as knowledge bank, policy-maker and financial institution. The volume offers a compelling contribution to our understanding of development studies and of development itself.
The Political Economy of Development is an invaluable critical resource for students, policy-makers and activists in development studies.