Anthropological Approaches To Resettlement

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adaptation strategies resettlement
Agricultural Resettlement
anthropological approach
Bank's Resettlement Policy
Bank’s Resettlement Policy
Beles Valley
Brazilian Power Sector
case studies involuntary migration
Category=JHM
development-induced displacement
Displaced Populations
economic development projects
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
forced migration
Headman's Council
Headman’s Council
Hopi Tribe
host community integration
human migration studies
Ice Office
Involuntary Resettlement
Irrigation Settlers
Khashm El Girba
legal frameworks displacement
Manantali Dam
Multidisciplinary Collaborative Efforts
Navajo Nation
Navajo Tribe
population resettlement
Pow Er
Resettled Village
Resettlem Ent
Resettlement Policy
rural organizations
social impact assessment
Village Section
Vocational Skills Training Program
Wadi Haifa
World Bank's Involuntary Resettlement
World Bank's Resettlement Policy
World Bank’s Involuntary Resettlement
World Bank’s Resettlement Policy
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367162221
  • Weight: 471g
  • Dimensions: 147 x 222mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Oct 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book is about people who have been forced resettle because of development projects. It takes stock of recent applied social science research on involuntary resettlement and forms a part of an international discussion on theories of resettlement and what social scientists can do about it.
Michael M. Cernea is the Senior Advisor for Social Policy and Sociology of the World Bank, in Washington, D.C. He has taught and lectured in many universities in Europe and the United States, is the recipient of the Solon T. Kimball Award for Public Policy and Applied Anthropology of the American Anthropological Association (1988), and was elected to the Academy of Sciences of Romania (1991). He has written several books and numerous studies on development, social change, population resettlement, rural organizations, diffusion of innovations. He is the editor and senior author of the volume Putting People First: Sociological Variable in Development (Oxford University Press, 1985 and 1991). E. Guggenheim has been an anthropologist at the World Bank since 1989. His interest in resettlement stems from his dissertation fieldwork on class politics in the northern Philippines. Working in what would have been the command area of the Chico River hydroelectric dams, he saw first-hand the conflict generated by development-caused resettlement. His publications include Power and Protest in the Countryside (with Robert Weller), The Developmental Dynamics of Displacement; Cock or Bull: Cockfighting and Social Change in the Philip[1]pines ; Compadrazgo and the Symbolism of Birth (with Maurice Bloch) and Resettlement in Colombia: the Case of El Guavio