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Title: PIA 2501


1
PIA 2501
  • Development Policy and Management

2
A Request
  • Please submit by next week a one page, third
    person biography (with a picture), to instructor
    at second session of the course. The biography
    should state your degree, your major and a brief
    statement of your career goals.

3
A Second Request
  • Please ask questions and contribute to discussion

4
  • THE NATURE OF THE DEBATE

5
Major Themes
  • I. The Situation Today
  • II. The Impact of Colonialism
  • III. Twentieth Century Authoritarianism
  • IV. The End of Colonialism
  • V. Keynesianism and the Western Development
    Model

6
The Situation Today
  • 2009

7
Development as a Concept The Problem
  • The industrialized countries, which accounted
    for 40 percent of the world's population after
    World War II, now account for only 20 percent,
    though they earn 85 percent of the world's
    income.

8
For Those Interested in Poverty
  • (New York Oxford University Press, 2007)

9
At Issue
  • In the coming decades, the industrialized world
    is expected to make up only 12 to 15 percent of
    the planetary population, as 90 to 95 percent of
    all births take place in the poorest countries.
  • I see around the world-poverty, the collapse
    of cities, porous borders, cultural and racial
    strife, growing economic disparities, weakening
    nation-states--We are not in control... (Robert
    Kaplan)

10
Robert D. Kaplan
11
Development as a Concept The Image
  • Robert Kaplans view
  • Economic and social development is generally
    cruel, painful, violent, and uneven

12
Development as a Concept The Controversy
  • some nations, including the United States, may
    be retreating into a fortress like nationalism
  • - Robert Kaplan, Ends of the Earth argument

13
The Ends of the Earth Argument
  • Certain countries are separating and being
    separated from the world economy.
  • Most of Africa except Egypt and South Africa
  • Parts of Indian sub-continent- Burma, Sri Lanka-
    Central Asia
  • Parts of the non-Oil Middle East
  • Parts of South East Asia-Cambodia and Laos-
  • Parts of Central/South America and the Balkans
    follows

14
Reference
  • Robert Kaplan, The Ends of the Earth A Journey
    at the Dawn of the 21st Century (New York Random
    House 1996).

15
Author of the Week Robert D. Kaplan
  • Robert D. Kaplan (born in 1952)) is an American
    journalist. He is currently an editor for the
    Atlantic Monthly. His writings have also been
    featured in the Washington Post, the New York
    Times and the Wall Street Journal, among other
    newspapers and publications.
  • He is known for his controversial essays about
    the nature of U.S. power have spurred debate in
    academia, the media, and the highest levels of
    government.
  • A frequent theme in his work is the re-emergence
    of cultural and historical tensions temporarily
    suspended during the Cold War. He has traveled to
    and reported on more than 80 countries.

16
Picards Perspective
  • History is Important
  • Culture Defines Choices
  • Start with empirical reality and normative
    choices follow
  • Regional Analysis is Important

17
Influence Transition Authors
  • Okot p'Bitek
  • Paul Theroux- Tarzan as an Expatriate
  • Ugandan Poet

18
Quote of the Day
  • Okot pBitekUganda novelist
  • Foreign Experts and Peace Corps swarm the
    Country Like white Ants. (Transition Magazine,
    1966)
  • Picard read in Masaka Uganda, when it was
    first published. He was a Peace Corps volunteer
    teacher at the time.

19
Note Suggested Reading Kenya and Indonesian
Images
  • Barack Obama, Dreams from My Father A Story of
    Race and Inheritance (New York Three Rivers
    Press, 2004), pp. 392-430. (Africa)
  • Barack Obama, The Audacity of Hope Thoughts
    on Reclaiming the American Dream  (New York
    Vintage Books, 2006), Chapter Eight, pp. 320-382.
    (General and Southeast Asia)
  •  

20
How Did We Get to this Point?
  • Historical Structures
  • Overseas colonial structures, land-based
    colonialism, post-colonial society
  • Problems of Defining Development and
    Modernization Theory
  • Colonial Underdevelopment Argument

21
The Impact of Colonialism
  • Periods 1. Age of Exploration
  • 2. Early Colonialism- Mercantilism
  • 3. De Jure or Formal Colonialism
  • 4. Old vs. New Colonialism
  • 5. Land Based Colonial Empires
  • 6. De Facto (Neo) Colonialism
  • 7. Authoritarianism and the End of Empire
  • 8. Decolonization after WWII
  • 9. Nationalism, Independence and Theories of
    Development

22
Overseas Colonial Structures, Values, (1500-1960)
and Post-Colonial Society
  • 1. Age of Expansion 1500-1700. Extraction and
    Exploration. Dominated by Spain, Portugal and
    later Holland
  • 2. Overseas colonialism (Mercantilism
    Phase-1700-1856- French and British)
  • The creation of external trade patterns and
    government expenditures directed toward the
    development of an export economy
  • 3. De Jure colonialism After 1856
  • Legal and internationally recognized formal
    control of government structures when trade,
    economic and governmental sectors of a society
    are formally or legally controlled by another
    country

23
Age of Exploration
24
Cecil Rhodes
25
Colonial Structures, Values, and Post-Colonial
Society (1500-1950)
  • 4. Old Colonialism vs. New Colonialism
    (after 1920)
  • a. Early colonial development focused on
    infrastructure to support export and import
    trade
  • b. Human resource development was neglected
  • c. ideology of Free trade that masked a reality
    which developed markets for mother country goods
    and provided raw materials for industrial
    production (Colonial Preference)
  • d. New Colonialism- Modernization and
    Westernization (1920-1950)

26
Early Colonial Control The Colonial Prefect-
World Wide
  • Named the district officer, magistrate, landrost,
    district commissioner, the commandant, the
    collector (Asia, Africa, Middle East, East
    Europe)
  • By contrast, administration was Functional in
    Spanish Latin America, Philippines, and in some
    Neo-Colonial systemsno prefect
  • Government expenditure was limited to the
    military and police prior to 1920s

27
The Colonial Governor (The Prefect Model)
28
Land Based Colonialism
  • 5. European Empires
  • Do the terms colonialism and underdevelopment
    work for Eastern Europe, the CIS, Central Asia
    and the Caucasus?
  • Administrative structures were similar to those
    of overseas colonialism
  • After 1989, These are often labeled Transitional
    States

29
Archduke Franz Ferdinand
30
Land Based Colonialism
  • Janine Wedel, in Collision and Collusion, raises
    two questions
  • Are transitional states developmental?
  • Are they transitional?
  • What does she mean?

31
De Facto vs. Neo-Colonialism
  • 6. De Facto Colonialism
  • No formal legal ties but in practice power
    relationships between colonial powers and puppet
    regimes
  • Thailand, Ethiopia, Persia, Nepal, the Arabian
    Peninsula, and Afghanistan, much of Latin America
    after the 1850s
  • Parallel between formal colonial systems and
    informal influence
  • Neo-colonialism after 1960

32
Break Time
  • TEN MINUTE BREAK

33
7. Authoritarianism and the End of Empires
  • Totalitarianism? Fascism and Communism.

34
Nationalism and Development- Five Minute History
  • Neo-Nationalism- Royalist Conservatism in Europe
    and Asia
  • Corporatism Fascism
  • Socialism/Communism
  • Keynesianism
  • New Orthodoxy

35
Japan Nationalism and the End of Empire
  • Looked to Model of Japan prior to World War II
    (Toland Book)
  • Nationalism developed in the 1930s and 1940s
    throughout much of the colonial world including
    much of central and Eastern Europe. It had four
    variations.

36
Japan and the History of Development (Toland,
The Rising Sun) Two Questions
  • What was the Pre-War Japanese Government view of
    Colonialism in Asia?
  • Why is Japan Important in the development of
    nationalism in Africa and Asia?
  • For Further Reading Herbert P. Bix, Hirohito and
    the Making of Modern Japan (New York Harper
    Collins, 2000).

37
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere (model
for LDC Nationalism)
38
Central European CorporatismSocialism and
Fascism WWII
  1. Dominant Nationalism
  2. Absence of Renaissance Central Europe
  3. Multi-ethnicity and land based expansion
  4. Revolutionary Transformation and Collapse in the
    20th Century
  5. Primacy of the Party under National Socialism
  6. Prefectoral Model of local state Party Authority
  7. Promoted a Mobilizing and social engineering
    model of state transformation

39
Neo-Nationalism in Europe and Latin America
(1930s)
  • António de Oliveira Salazar (1932)- Portuguese
    Overseas Territories
  • Franco and the Spanish Civil War
  • Peronism (Juan Peron Argentina 1944)
  • Impact of the functions of government
  • Territorial Governors appointed by the President
    (Prefects)
  • The importance of Military control in regions
    -Spanish Military Governors called Presidencies

40
António de Oliveira Salazar, Leader of
Portugal, 1932-1970
41
The Leaders Argentina and Spain
  • Juan and Eva Peron and Francisco Franco

42
Neo-Nationalism in Latin America (1940s)
  • Patronage (The Universal Problem)
  • Legalistic basis of governance in principle
  • Clientalist, class or mass based appeal, charisma
  • Community level political culture localismo
    inward looking villages and communities

43
Patronage in Mongolia
44
Further Reading on Latin America
  • Kenneth J. Andrien, The Kingdom of Quito The
    State and Regional Development (Cambridge
    Cambridge University Press, 1995).
  •  
  • Peter S. Cleaves, Bureaucratic Politics and
    Administration in Chile (Berkeley University of
    California Press, 1974).
  •  
  • Keith Griffin, Underdevelopment in Spanish
    America An Interpretation (London Geoge Allen,
    1969)
  •  
  • Jack Hopkins, (ed.) Latin America Perspectives
    on a Region (New York Holmes and Meier, 1987).
  •  
  • Howard J. Wiarda, Politics and social change in
    Latin America still a distinct tradition?
    (Boulder Westview Press, 1992).

45
Socialism and Fascism WWII
  • Some have used the term Totalitarianism
  • Provided models for Corporatist Development
  • Legacy of Imperial and Socialist Land Based
    Empires (Germany, Russia, Austria and Turkey)
  • Corporatist and Commandist Variations

46
The Development Era
  • 8. Decolonization
  • after World War Two

47
End of Sea Based Colonialism
  • Egypt- 1922
  • Dutch East Indies- 1944 (Indonesia)
  • Philippines (1946)
  • India- 1947
  • Israel-1948
  • Sudan-1965
  • Ghana-1957 (The Deluge-1960)

48
Sudan
  • President Omar al-Bashir
  • Sleepless in Sudan

49
From Middle Class Nationalism to Mass Movements
  • World War II led to the collapse of over seas
    empires
  • Begins Japanese imperialism and Asian nationalism
  • The Atlantic Treaty and self-determinism
  • Two patterns
  • Gandhi and non-violence and
  • Sukarno, Ho Chi Minh and violent resistance or
    revolution

50
(L to R) PM Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru of India,
Pres. Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, Pres. Gamal Abdel
Nasser of United Arab Rep., Pres. Sukarno of
Indonesia, Pres. Tito of Yugoslavia.
51
Independence
  • Between 1945 and 1965 more than one hundred new
    states came into existence
  • Kwame Nkrumah Seek ye first the Political
    Kingdom
  • Implication was that economic development would
    follow

52
The Development Era 1948-1989
  • In the 1940s and 1950s there was a rhetoric of
    Nationalism through out the World
  • Political Change (Nationalism in the Middle East,
    and Latin America) and Independence (Caribbean,
    Africa, and Asia (1960s-1970s)
  • Transformation in Eastern Europe and the CIS
    (1980s)

53
Mixed vs. Command Economies
  • 9. Nationalism, Independence and Theories of
    Development
  • Socialism as a Model?
  • Part of European Social Democracy

54
Social Democracy
55
Vs. Communist Theory and Development
  1. State Control
  2. Social Engineering
  3. Command Economy
  4. Industrialization vs. Rural Transformation
  5. State Managed Development

56
The Great Helmsman
57
The Western Development Model
  • Keynesianism

58
Historical Character
  • John Maynard Keynes

59
John Maynard Keynes, 1883-1946
  • British Economist who worked several years in the
    British India Office 
  • John Rapley Keynes had no problem with the
    market economy. He liked the machine but judged
    it to be in need of improvement if it was to
    operate well.

60
John Maynard Keynes
  • His goal was to influence the market and not
    replace it
  • Influenced the U.S. New Deal and the thinking of
    the Labour Party in England
  • He had an important influence on the social
    democratic parties in Western Europe
  • His ideas suggested that European mixed economies
    could be replicated in LDCs

61
Keynesianism as Economic Principle
  • Government had a role in the management of the
    economy
  • KEY Faith in the State

62
Keynesianism
  • Physical development (roads and dams) and
    Economic Growth
  • Physical and Mental Change or Social Development
  • Human Resource Development vs. Social and
    Economic Change
  • Proposed a Mixed Economypublic and private

63
sECOND AUTHOR OF THE DAY
  • Kathleen Staudt
  • Peace Corps Volunteer in the Philippines
    (1966-1968) Researcher in Kenya- 1970s
  • Raised Question- Is there a grass-roots
    perspective? Role of Gender?
  • Why or Why not?

64
AUTHORS Themes
  • John Rapley- Keynesian
  • Jennifer Brinkerhoff- Public-Private
    Partnerships- The use of Grants
  • Pressman and Wildavsky- Implementation Why plans
    do not become reality (Oakland, California)

65
NEXT WEEK
  • The Nature of the Debate
  • Theories

66
Discussion- Next Week
  • Paul Theroux
  • Robert Chambers
  • George Orwell

67
The Nature of the Debate
  • Issues and Questions
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