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Genre/Form: | Electronic books |
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Additional Physical Format: | Print version: Researching South-South development cooperation. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York : Routledge, 2019 (DLC) 2019007276 |
Material Type: | Document, Secondary (senior high) school, Internet resource |
Document Type: | Internet Resource, Computer File |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Wiebe Nauta; Elsje Fourie; Emma Mawdsley |
ISBN: | 9780429459146 0429459149 9780429859823 0429859821 9780429859816 0429859813 9780429859830 042985983X |
OCLC Number: | 1102592929 |
Description: | 1 online resource |
Contents: | The (im)possibility of Southern theory : the opportunities and challenges of cultural brokerage in co-producing knowledge about China-Africa Relations / Giles Mohan, Ben Lampert, May Tan-Mullins and Richmond Atta-Ankomah -- Where is the South? : global, postcolonial and intersectional perspectives / Ruben Gonzalez-Vicente -- Devouring international relations : anthropophagy and the study of South-South cooperation / Adriana Erthal Abdenur -- Has research gone South? : perspectives of a Brazilian researcher in Britain / Rubens de S. Duarte -- Criticizing your 'motherland' to foreigners? : the dilemma of critical scholarship and self-censorship in analysing Korea's foreign aid as a national(istic) project / Sung-Mi Kim -- 'We need people like you' : reflections on identity and expectations in South-South cooperation research / Cynthia Kamwengo -- Silent North, loud South : reflections on transnational research in Afrasian and Afrabian spaces / John Njenga Karugia -- A plea for kaleidoscopic knowledge production / Mayke Kaag and Miriam Ocadiz -- The politics of knowledge production and post/de/anti-colonial positionality / Han Cheng -- Difference within similarity : how South-South Cooperation research should no longer label 'difference' as an obstacle to partnerships / Natalia Herbst -- The Africa-China Reporting Project in Johannesburg as South-South journalism nexus / Barry Van Wyk -- Doing research on unstable ground : the ebb and flow of Brazilian South-South cooperation, from Lula to Bolsonaro / Letícia Cesarino -- Interrogating the binary in Brazil's agricultural cooperation for development / Lídia Cabral -- Writing about South-South development cooperation as a Mexican diplomat / Gerardo Bracho -- Interrogating the solidarity narrative : re-discovering difference through African-Asian gender politics / Rirhandu Mageza-Barthel and Uta Ruppert -- The 'avuncular' gatekeepers : interrogating authority, authenticity and autonomy in SSC scholarship in India / Supriya Roychoudhury -- Experiencing gender and positionality as a female professional in the Korean ODA sector / Jinhee Kim -- Let's focus on facilitators : life-worlds and reciprocity in researching 'Southern' development cooperation agencies / Sebastian Haug -- 'When you leave, they will kill me' : ethnography, ethics and (post)colonial entanglements in SSDC research / Katherine Howell -- "I'm talking to you because you are Polish" : reflections on identities and historical memories in researching North-South relations / Katarzyna Baran -- Conclusion / Wiebe Nauta, Emma Mawdsley and Elsje Fourie. |
Series Title: | Rethinking development. |
Responsibility: | Wiebe Nauta, Elsje Fourie, Emma Mawdsley. |
Abstract:
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
"This highly original and theoretically sophisticated collection by an unusually diverse group of contributors subjects the idea of 'south-south development cooperation' to the sort of critical scrutiny it has long demanded. In doing so they break important new theoretical ground and offer a new and potentially transformative activist agenda." - David Lewis, London School of Economics & Political Science, UK"The economic and political rise of China and other Asian countries is profoundly reconfiguring international relations, including the knowledge production on South-South Development Cooperation. This volume presents an inspiring selection of perspectives, while self-critically questioning the positionality of the authors amidst increasing valorization and commodification of research." - Arndt Graf, Africa's Asian Options (AFRASO), Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany"Rich in analysis and reflection, this kaleidoscopic volume brings together emergent and established voices to interrogate the ontologies, epistemologies, and methodologies of South-South Development Cooperation. This result is a book that is novel in both form and content, and that breaks new ground by debating and deliberating how identity, power and positionality shape geographies of knowledge production concerning a key topic for contemporary development studies." - Jamie Doucette, University of Manchester, UK"This creative volume traces, theorizes and reflects on changing research epistemologies following global shifts in economic and political power. Clearly, development studies has been waiting for this book, though its importance far surpasses the discipline. Decolonising knowledge (production) all in academia must: the discussions in this volume lead the way." - Bram Buscher, Wageningen University, Netherlands"A bold questioning of what it means to research south-south development cooperation. Highly creative in form and content, this volume will greatly serve teachers, students, researchers and practitioners to reflect upon uncomfortable yet necessary questions of positionality and theory-building in globalization and development studies. I expect this book to be of great influence." - Valentina Mazzucato, Maastricht University, Netherlands"This interesting collection offers an array of studies on `the politics of knowledge production' in connection to South-South development cooperation, a rapidly emerging field and realigning global ideologies and processes of `development'. Indeed, virtually all chapters are written by scholars from the global South: the editors only wrote the Introduction and the Conclusion. They address a variety of relevant issues regarding social epistemology, development, and identity politics, and while here and there somewhat `Third-Worldist' in approach the book provides essential and challenging reading, bound to evoke critical debate." - Jon Abbink, Professor of Politics & Governance in Africa, Leiden University, The Netherlands Read more...


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Related Subjects:(11)
- Economic development -- Developing countries.
- Intellectual cooperation.
- Developing countries -- Foreign economic relations.
- EDUCATION -- Essays.
- EDUCATION -- Organizations & Institutions.
- EDUCATION -- Reference.
- POLITICAL SCIENCE -- International Relations -- General.
- SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Third World Development.
- Economic development.
- International economic relations.
- Developing countries.