Comparative Political Economy of Development

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act
agrarian transformation
Asian Green Revolution
Associational Participation
Beedi Workers
Bonded Labour
caste and labour relations
Caste Hindu
Category=GTM
Category=GTP
Category=JP
Category=KCP
Central Tamil Nadu
Contract Farming
contract farming studies
dalit
Dalit Entrepreneurs
Dalit Respondents
Dalit Woman
Du Toit
employment
entrepreneurs
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Factory Companies
Garment Cluster
gendered labour markets
guarantee
Hungry Season
informal economies
Moi State
nadu
national
Nonfarm Economy
Opium Poppy
Opium Poppy Cultivation
rural
rural poverty analysis
Rural Tamil Nadu
Smallholder Tea
social networks in economic development
SSA Country
tamil
Tamil Nadu
Vice Versa
Wine Farmers
women
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415809955
  • Weight: 710g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book illustrates the enduring relevance and vitality of the comparative political economy of development approach promoted among others by a group of social scientists in Oxford in the 1980s and 1990s. Contributors demonstrate the viability of this approach as researchers and academics become more convinced of the inadequacies of orthodox approaches to the understanding of development.

Detailed case material obtained from comparative field research in Africa and South Asia informs analyses of exploitation in agriculture; the dynamics of rural poverty; seasonality; the non farm economy; class formation; labour and unfreedom; the gendering of the labour force; small scale production and contract farming; social networks in industrial clusters; stigma and discrimination in the rural and urban economy and its politics. Reasoned policy suggestions are made and an analysis of the comparative political economy of development approach is applied to the situation of Africa and South Asia.

Aptly presenting the relation between theory and empirical material in a dynamic and interactive way, the book offers meaningful and powerful explanations of what is happening in the continent of Africa and the sub-continent of South Asia today. It will be of interest to researchers in the fields of development studies, rural sociology, political economy, policy and practice of development and Indian and African studies.

Barbara Harriss-White is director of Oxford University’s new Contemporary South Asian Studies programme, and was formerly Director of the Department of International Development at Queen Elizabeth House. She has been studying India ever since driving there in 1969, focussing on the political economy of long term rural development.

Judith Heyer was formerly a Tutorial Fellow of Somerville College, and Lecturer in the Department of Economics, at Oxford University, before which she held posts at Nairobi University’s Institute for Development Studies, and Economics Department. She is now a Fellow Emeritus of Somerville College, Oxford. A specialist in rural development and in micro-economics, she has written and edited a number of books on rural and agricultural development in Kenya and Africa.