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    Overview

    Critically explores the cultural and social dynamics of development and international aid. Focusing on power and difference, the paper investigates issues of gender, empowerment, community-driven approaches, policy and indigenous worldviews.

    Globally, billions of dollars in international development aid are spent every month, targeted at managed change, often in cross-cultural contexts. The Anthropology of Development – a major subfield of anthropology – investigates development concepts and aspirations, power relations and the costs and benefits of interventions. This paper provides an overview of the subdiscipline.

    Topics include:

    • The origins and evolution of the concept of "development"
    • Indigenous and local notions of "development", and how transversal meta-narratives of development shape local aspirations
    • The relationship between development policy, implementation and outcomes, with attention to unintended consequences
    • Philosophies and techniques of community-based development, and the institutional and community micro-politics that can complicate it in practice
    • Common roles that applied anthropologists undertake in the development industry, and the practical and ethical dilemmas these can raise

    About this paper

    Paper title People, Culture and Development
    Subject Anthropology
    EFTS 0.1667
    Points 20 points
    Teaching period Semester 2 (On campus)
    Domestic Tuition Fees ( NZD ) $1,240.75
    International Tuition Fees Tuition Fees for international students are elsewhere on this website.
    Prerequisite
    72 300-level points
    Notes
    May not be credited with ANTH411 completed in 2021
    Eligibility

    Students would benefit from a background in the Social Sciences.
    This paper may be taken as an elective for the Master of International Development and Planning (https://www.otago.ac.nz/courses/qualifications/midp.html)

    Contact

    hannah.bulloch@otago.ac.nz

    Teaching staff

    Dr Hannah Bulloch

    Teaching Arrangements

    This paper is taught in weekly 2-3 hour seminars.
    It is 100% internally assessed.

    Textbooks

    Course readings are available through eReserve on Blackboard.

    Graduate Attributes Emphasised

    Global perspective, Cultural understanding, Scholarship, Critical thinking, Interdisciplinary perspective, Communication, Self-motivation, Research, Ethics
    View more information about Otago's graduate attributes.

    Learning Outcomes

    Students who successfully complete the paper will:

    • Identify and critique the cultural assumptions underlying a range a key development theories, concepts and approaches
    • Compare how notions of "development", and cognate concepts, vary across cultures and groups
    • Critically engage with key anthropological and sociological debates on aid effectiveness
    • Understand a range of practical ways that anthropologists apply their skills in the development sector and assess some key ethical issues with which applied anthropologists grapple

    Timetable

    Semester 2

    Location
    Dunedin
    Teaching method
    This paper is taught On Campus
    Learning management system
    Blackboard

    Lecture

    Stream Days Times Weeks
    Attend
    A1 Monday 14:00-16:50 29-35, 37-41
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