The Future of Rural Development

The Future of Rural Development
Author: Hans Gsanger
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 97
Release: 2005-06-28
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1135778353

This book gives a practitioner's account of international experiences with rural development seen from a German angle. It argues for a development co-operation for rural areas that actively supports popular participation, beneficiaries' self-organization, decentralization and, consequently, smaller self-managed (para)projects rather than large, top-down organized rural development projects.

Poverty, Inequality and Rural Development

Poverty, Inequality and Rural Development
Author: David Greenaway
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 223
Release: 1994-09-12
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 134923446X

Poverty alleviation is a major objective of development. More than a fifth of the world's population lives in absolute poverty, and the majority of the poor live in rural areas. This volume studies what can be done for alleviating rural poverty. Four chapters address the measurement of poverty and inequality, including the use of household expenditure surveys and intra-household income distribution. Evidence is presented for India, Mauritania, Cte d'Ivoire and China. Other chapters present case studies on strategies for rural development: provision of rural credit in Bangladesh and India; technical change in Philippine agriculture; contract farming in Thailand; and banana growers in the Windwards. The contributions introduce the problems of rural development and show that effective rural development is assisted by investment in education and secure access to credit; that equity is important for incentives but not directly related to poverty; and that technical and institutional reform are essential, but require careful design and implementation.

State and Class in Africa

State and Class in Africa
Author: Nelson Kasfir
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 132
Release: 2013-12-16
Genre: History
ISBN: 1317792084

This collection explores the relationships of class and state in contemporary African politics.

The Imperatives of Urban and Regional Planning

The Imperatives of Urban and Regional Planning
Author: Anis Ur Rahmaan
Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
Total Pages: 796
Release: 2011
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1465336680

This book is comprised of articles and papers that have come about after years of academic and applied research endeavors of the practitioners and academicians in the field of urban and regional development planning. Most of these articles have already been presented and deliberated in national and international conferences held in different parts of the world, namely: Indianapolis, Newcastle upon Tyne, Rome, Istanbul, Cairo, Alexandria, Vienna, Stockholm, Jeddah, Riyadh, Jubail, Islamabad, Penang, and Bandung. The concepts and case studies described in this book bring home the fact that the world is undergoing a gyrational transition. Not only are developed and developing countries getting influenced by each other and transforming due to a process of circular causation, but each of the two sets of countries are also undergoing a simultaneous internal transformation due to the differential infusion of technology and indigenous entrepreneurship. As a consequence, highly diversified urban systems are getting integrated interactively, leading to the formation of a global village and achievement of a unity in diversity!

India's Demographic Transition

India's Demographic Transition
Author: Sebastian Irudaya Rajan
Publisher: M.D. Publications Pvt. Ltd.
Total Pages: 308
Release: 1997
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9788175330283

This book brings together some papers on Indian censuses and in particular the 1991 census. Among the subjects discussed are probllems of conducting the census operations and collection of data, especially at the field level, the decline in the sex ratio and in the population growth, the employment situation with the ocus of women and work, urbanization and the nature of demographic transition in India.

The Broken Hoe

The Broken Hoe
Author: David Uru Iyam
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 263
Release: 1995-06-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0226388492

In this study of the Biase, a small ethnic group living in Nigeria's Cross River State, David Uru Iyam attempts to resolve a long-standing controversy among development theorists: must Third World peoples adopt Western attitudes, practices, and technologies to improve their standard of living or are indigenous beliefs, technologies, and strategies better suited to local conditions? The Biase today face social and economic pressures that seriously strain their ability to cope with the realities of modern Nigeria. Iyam, an anthropologist and a Biase, examines the relationship between culture and development as played out in projects in local communities. Western technologies and beliefs alone cannot ensure economic growth and modernization, Iyam shows, and should not necessarily be imposed on poor rural groups who may not be prepared to incorporate them; neither, however, is it possible to recover indigenous coping strategies given the complexities of the postcolonial world. A successful development strategy, Iyam argues, needs to strengthen local managerial capacity, and he offers suggestions as to how this can be done in a range of cultural and social settings.