A long-term analysis of development projects in rural Tanzania, tracing the improvised, reactive nature of small-scale interventions, aimed at staving off the threat posed by acute poverty to local governments' legitimacy and effectiveness.
A long-term analysis of development projects in rural Tanzania, tracing the improvised, reactive nature of small-scale interventions, aimed at staving off the threat posed by acute poverty to local governments' legitimacy and effectiveness.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Felicitas Becker is Professor of African history at Ghent University, and has previously taught at School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, and the University of Cambridge. Her Ph.D. thesis from the University of Cambridge won the Ellen MacArthur Prize in economic history, and her first book, Becoming Muslim in Mainland Tanzania, 1890-2000 (2008), obtained a British Academy postdoctoral fellowship publication award. She is currently working on the interaction between notions of progress used in development discourse and those deployed by religious reformers in East Africa.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. The end of slavery, famine and food aid in Tunduru 2. Changing configurations of poverty in the colonial Southeast and the myth of communalism 3. The struggle to trade 4. Independence and the rhetoric of feasibility 5. Villagisation and the pursuit of market access 6. The politics of development in the era of liberalisation 7. Performing and pursuing development in Kineng'ene Conclusion Bibliography.
Introduction 1. The end of slavery, famine and food aid in Tunduru 2. Changing configurations of poverty in the colonial Southeast and the myth of communalism 3. The struggle to trade 4. Independence and the rhetoric of feasibility 5. Villagisation and the pursuit of market access 6. The politics of development in the era of liberalisation 7. Performing and pursuing development in Kineng'ene Conclusion Bibliography.
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