Global Institutions and Development: Framing the World?

Portada
Morten Bøås, Desmond McNeill
Psychology Press, 2004 - 253 páginas
The impact multilateral institutions such as the World Bank and IMF have on development is hotly debated, but few doubt their power and influence. This book examines the concepts that have powerfully influenced development policy and, more broadly, looks at the role of ideas in international development institutions and how they have affected current development discourse. The authors analyze why some ideas are taken up by these institutions, how the ideas travel within the systems and how they are translated into policy, modified, distorted or resisted. This unique book explores a very broad range of ideas and institutions and provides thorough and detailed case studies in the context of broader theoretical analysis. The volume explores topics such as poverty, global governance, sustainable development and the environment, and provides detailed case studies of the World Bank, the WTO, the IMF, Asian Development Bank, UN Development Programme and the OECD's Development Assistance Committee, which should be of particular interest to advanced undergraduate students and scholars.

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Contenido

The development discourse in the multilateral system
13
biography of an idea
41
the case
56
The World Bank and the environment
72
Sustainable development and the World Trade Organization
95
Social capital and the World Bank
108
Hegemony neoliberal good governance and the International
124
the Asian Development
137
The evolution of the concept of poverty in multilateral financial
164
The role of ideas in the United Nations Development
178
across the constructivistrealist divide
193
who is framing what?
206
Bibliography
225
Index
251
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