NGOs and Civil Society at the End of a World

IF 3 2区 社会学 Q1 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES Development and Change Pub Date : 2024-03-10 DOI:10.1111/dech.12816
Jim Igoe
{"title":"NGOs and Civil Society at the End of a World","authors":"Jim Igoe","doi":"10.1111/dech.12816","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p> <span>Nidhi Srinivas</span>, <span>Against NGOs: A Critical Perspective on Civil Society, Management and Development</span>. <span>Cambridge</span>: Cambridge University Press, <span>2022</span>. <span>343</span> pp. £ 42.00 hardback.</p><p> <span>Jenna H. Hanchey</span>, <span>The Center Cannot Hold: Decolonial Possibility and the Collapse of a Tanzanian NGO</span>. <span>Durham, NC</span>: Duke University Press, <span>2023</span>. <span>232</span> pp. £ 76.00 hardback.</p><p>The invitation to write an essay1 on Srinivas's <i>Against NGOs: A Critical Perspective on Civil Society, Management and Development</i> reached me as I was revisiting the Tanzanian village where I had begun my own research on NGOs 30 years before. Only that village was now a district headquarters and burgeoning urban centre. The state and ruling party dominated the scene architecturally, aesthetically and economically. The modest cluster of houses and shops I remembered from 1993 had morphed into a paved main road lined with electrified supermarkets, bars, restaurants and ATMs. The ancestral wells, which had provided water for Maasai people and livestock for generations immemorial, were surrounded by urban sprawl and said to be going dry. The dusty offices of community-based NGOs had disappeared, along with the flags of opposition parties. While this modern main street certainly bustled, it no longer crackled with the nervous energy of an emergent land rights movement.</p><p>One day, during this visit, I sat talking with a Maasai elder I had not seen since the 1990s. In the friendly way of people who had known each other once but never well, we waxed nostalgic about the heyday of Tanzania's Indigenous NGOs: short courses in participatory research methodologies, land rights workshops, grassroots protests and a community-based FM radio station. He then asked my professional opinion as to what had become of those promising NGOs and their dynamic leaders. Sad to be dampening our enthusiasm, I described how donor agendas and reporting requirements had moved NGO leaders away from their communities. Moreover, the state systematically harassed the most influential leaders, and competing donor agendas turned NGOs against each other. Many donors were quick to lose interest, making it difficult for Indigenous NGOs to sustain their own agendas and activities on behalf of their constituent communities. Under these pressures, some leaders burnt out, fell ill and even died. Others left for more secure opportunities in the development sector, academia and officialdom. Others faded into obscurity. Considering this, my old acquaintance asked if I thought such days could ever come again. Since they happened before, I reasoned, they could happen again. ‘Let us pray that they do’, he said. ‘Yes’, I agreed, ‘let us pray that they do’.</p><p>On my flight home, I recalled this conversation, noticed that it coincided with my agreement to review a book about NGOs that I had yet to read, and wondered if and how they were related. Back in my department at the University of Virginia (UVA), in Charlottesville, I found <i>Against NGOs</i> in my faculty mailbox. Throughout the fall term, I read through its 300 pages of far-ranging, though meticulously organized, arguments in fits and starts between my ample responsibilities as department chair. In retrospect, this intense reading experience was fundamental to my analysis in this essay. First, however, I needed to re-read the book. In the opening pages, Srinivas proposes moving away from normative NGO-centric analysis toward ‘a gaze that lingers on historical shifts in capitalism and their contemporary implications for development and management’ (p. 17). While this proposition struck me as straightforward enough, I was challenged by the extraordinary detail of his presentation in tracking the interconnections of capitalism, management and development through the heart of the book. I sometimes found myself losing track of his arguments while wondering about the relevant actors and intended audience.</p><p>In my second reading of the book, I concentrated on following Srinivas's arguments through the elaborate details of each chapter, facilitated by an accompanying table tracking elements of common sense (more on which below) across development doctrines through colonialism, state capitalism and financialization (pp. 292–93). Among other things, this focused approach helped me to situate and reconsider my own experiences and analyses of NGOs. As an aspiring development anthropologist in the 1980s, I came of age during the period of financialization on Srinivas's table, when NGOs were heralded as the ‘magic bullet’ solution (Edwards and Hulme, <span>1996</span>: 5) to the failure of neoliberal market reforms. During my first semester of graduate school, my advisor was Allan Hoben, a prominent development anthropologist. He informed me that both the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the World Bank had established ‘NGO desks’ and told me that I should make NGOs the topic of my dissertation research. This turned out to be excellent advice.</p><p>The scholars who trained me began studying development in the 1960s, the United Nations's First Decade of Development. Their graduate school experiences corresponded to the apogee of modernization theory and management, as labelled by Srinivas (pp. 118–27). They then embarked on their professional careers during modernization's decline (pp. 138–41), a period marked roughly by the Tet Offensive in 1968 and the fall of Saigon in 1975 (see Ross, <span>1998</span>). They made their names working for and critiquing USAID and the World Bank. Their research centred on the organizational imperative of ‘moving money’ efficiently and cost-effectively, in keeping with funding cycles (Hoben, <span>1980</span>). Development bureaucrats coveted ‘fundable projects’ so much that they resorted to creating them. They were obsessed with their recipients’ ‘absorptive capacity’ and favoured high-profile infrastructure projects that could be funded by a few large loans to minimize their substantial processing costs (Tendler, <span>1975</span>).</p><p>Studies like these challenged my young expectations of development, and even more so, as I learned about projects like the Chico Dam in the Philippines, the Transmigration Project in Indonesia and the Polonoroeste Highway Network in Brazil. These projects, cited by Srinivas (pp. 211–25), illustrate the effects of high-management hegemony in the latter half of the 1970s and were funded by the World Bank. I was particularly moved by <i>Before the Bulldozer: The Nambiquara Indians and the World Bank</i> (<span>1989</span>) by anthropologist David Price,2 who violated his confidentiality agreement with the World Bank to publish this ethnographic exposé of Polonoroeste. Development, as I was coming to know it, was less about the betterment of humanity than rapacious profiteering, which left borrower countries with debts they could not pay and harmed the environment while displacing and dispossessing Indigenous communities. In light of all this, a promising antidote appeared to be coalitions of Indigenous communities and NGOs.</p><p>Between portrayals of NGOs as vanguards of democracy and my professors’ assurances that they were the future of development, I was inspired to make a career of studying this putatively novel entity. My enthusiasm intensified after arriving in Tanzania in the early 1990s and learning that Maasai communities were starting their own NGOs as vehicles of community-based development and land rights advocacy. Over the following years, I was present through moments of NGO exuberance and NGO disappointment. Three decades later, I still ponder the dissonance between them, and I have had many conversations like the one recounted above. Through these, I have become convinced that those moments of exuberance manifest, however fleetingly, desirable futures for the constituents of Maasai NGOs.</p><p>Relative to this possibility, I am intrigued by Srinivas's call for a critical approach to these questions, which focuses less on NGOs per se than on what they reflect, and sometimes challenge, about broader capitalist formations, which are racial capitalist formations to be sure (Robinson, <span>2021</span>). Jenna Hanchey's <i>The Center Cannot Hold: Decolonial Possibility and the Collapse of a Tanzanian NGO</i> offers a generative complement to Srinivas's <i>Against NGOs</i>, with its careful ethnographic attention to interactions between NGO dissolution and the decolonial possibilities that NGO emergence once promised. In the following section, I juxtapose the complementary perspectives of these two works to reassess remarkably enduring associations of NGOs, civil society and desirable futures.</p><p>While Srinivas's and Hanchey's respective books turn on remarkably different styles and perspectives, together they reflect a shared recognition of the importance of tending to both the specificity of NGOs and their communities, on the one hand, and the broader networks, processes and related concepts that reciprocally inform and influence specific NGO situations, on the other. Srinivas presents a broad history of NGOs in the immanence of their morphing capitalist milieus from their 19th-century colonial origins to the present day. His narrative is enriched by a wealth of curated examples of management doctrines, development practices and civil society (pp. 4–5). Hanchey, by contrast, delves into the nuanced history of a single Tanzanian NGO, which she calls Little Community, drawing from the discipline of rhetoric to connect her ethnographic narratives to wider structures and relationships. She characterizes rhetoric as ‘girdled by the nation-state in the formulations of public and civic life’ and endeavours to extend it ‘toward communal life as a global network’ (p. 12). Her framework and approach resonate with Srinivas's concerns regarding the common conflation of NGOs and civil society, which he sees as confounding the nuanced analysis needed to challenge the current backlash against NGOs as they fail in the impossible mission of managing capitalist development's socio-ecological contradictions.</p><p>Both scholars explicitly refrain from attributing these dynamics to some inherent pathology of NGOs. They emphasize instead their interactions with ‘broader structures of power’ (Beliso-De Jesús and Pierre, <span>2020</span>: 66, cited on p. 12). Srinivas directs his attention to global capitalist formations and their management regimes, encompassing the doctrines and practices that influence the perception, functioning and current pathologization of NGOs. Conversely, Hanchey highlights the impacts of ‘global flows of racial and colonial power’ (p. 5) and their manifestations in specific NGO situations. She vividly portrays Little Community as a site of decolonial contestation, detailing the struggles of community leaders and NGO workers against the oppressive actions of Mr Giles, a British lodge owner and co-founder of the NGO. These actions involved his tyrannic control of the NGO board, exploitation of their labour and self-serving land deals that he ostensibly undertook on behalf of his NGO and community, but which ultimately benefited his lodge.</p><p>In concluding <i>The Center Cannot Hold</i>, Hanchey invokes one of the organizing concepts of <i>Against NGOs</i>: common sense, as formulated by Antonio Gramsci. In his explication of the concept in <i>Against NGOs</i>, Srinivas highlights its connections to civil society in Gramsci's (<span>1971</span>) <i>Prison Notebooks</i> while labouring to distinguish it from the related concept of hegemony (p. 30). He describes common sense as ‘incomplete efforts of perception on the part of interest groups, where some of these perceptions become naturalized within knowledge groups as perceptions of the world’, further arguing that ‘when these perceptions are acted upon, and attached to epistemic foundations that gain purchase within powerful networks of actors, they become hegemonic’ (p. 289). Bolstered by the power and resources of the ruling classes, hegemony is made to appear coherent, universal and unassailable. However, it is at least as fraught with contradictions and untruths as any other system of common sense. Civil society, in these formulations, is the realm in which hegemony is articulated and imposed and where its contradictions become vulnerable to contestation and transformation.</p><p>In the case of Little Community, Hanchey concludes that ‘decolonial dreamwork emerges from the gaps, from the holes in hegemony, in the spaces elided by “common sense” (p. 189). As ‘the act of imagining impossible futures in order to bring them into being’, Hanchey argues that conditions for decolonial dreamwork are enhanced as NGOs come unravelled by their colonial contradictions and ‘new potentialities are revealed’ (p. 19). In comparable terms, Srinivas relates common sense to the contradictions of capitalist accumulation. He argues that ‘its productive character is its capacity to naturalize a growing sense of administrative crisis and thus prevent it from becoming a legitimacy crisis’ (p. 291), as reflected in the current hegemonic celebration and pathologization of NGOs. Like Hanchey, he points to the increasingly visible unravelling of previously taken-for-granted arrangements, contemplating ways they might catalyse radical transformations in common sense. He notes that ‘the political potential of common sense and the activity of knowledge production work together’ (ibid.), invoking potential alliances between knowledge workers and civil society actors. I now turn to these possibilities, which have been my continuous motivation and frustration in the recent years of my career.</p><p>In my everyday work life at UVA, I have learned that the prevailing common sense regarding development revolves around two concepts: the global and engagements. Together, they turn on a distinct here and there. The global literally means far from a here that is iconically represented by Thomas Jefferson's Rotunda.3 Communities in need of development are imagined as somewhere out there, most likely in other countries. Engagements revolve around the imperative of students leaving the familiar here of UVA ‘grounds’, going out there in the ‘real world’, and having a ‘global experience’. The power of these concepts is reflected in the dramatic growth of Global Studies at UVA over the past decade. This pan-university programme turns on the hegemonic ‘global’ while aspiring to engender critical capacities and skills to challenge its hegemony and navigate the complex relationships and liberatory possibilities it elides.</p><p>Growing numbers of similar educational programmes worldwide represent critical emergent locations for the kinds of knowledge work that Srinivas sees as essential to ‘working through common sense perceptions of development and management’ so that ‘the current global spectres of capitalism can be exorcised’ (p. 300). His concern with the problematic equation of NGOs and civil society is especially salient here. In the hegemonic cartographies of institutions like UVA, where NGOs are imagined as out there in the ‘real world’, it follows, according to the prevailing common sense, that the academy and civil society should be regarded as separate realms.</p><p>In such contexts, it is essential to bear in mind that Gramsci's analysis is fundamentally grounded in the concept of social class (Crehan, <span>2016</span>: 4). Accordingly, he viewed civil society as the realm of class struggle, in which some classes gain influence and become hegemonic (Mouffe, <span>1979</span>), while others are marginalized as subalterns (Gramsci, <span>2021</span>). ‘Civil society is the arena wherein the ruling class extends and reinforces its power by non-violent means’ (Buttigieg, <span>1995</span>: 26) and one in which the ‘prevailing common sense’ (Wainwright, <span>2013</span>: 165) might be contested and transformed by subaltern coalitions. Thus, as Srinivas asserts, it makes little sense to equate NGOs with civil society, as held by the prevailing development common sense. Likewise, the academy should be considered a pivotal site in the realm of civil society, in which intellectuals labour to produce the ideas and paradigms underpinning ruling class power and occasionally contest them.</p><p>Traditional intellectuals in this passage are ‘trained in the conceptual and philosophical elaboration of ideas and shaped as intellectuals within the existing academic infrastructure and its knowledge producing practices’ (ibid.: 22). However, they do not constitute an independent class with shared identities, autonomous institutions, and the resources necessary to pursue their collective interests. A key question here, therefore, is whether knowledge workers connected to development may indeed be construed as a distinctive social class. From a Gramscian perspective, Srinivas's distinction between knowledge workers and civil society actors appears to construe the former as traditional intellectuals without organic ties to civil society. Admittedly, that seems correct since Gramsci himself associated traditional intellectuals with academic and mid-level functionary professions, which these days include NGO workers. In light of Srinivas's central emphasis on the rise of management professionals, however, it is worth exploring the possibility that this group may constitute a distinct class and, if so, what their relationships with other classes might be like.</p><p>I am thinking specifically of the professional-managerial class (PMC), which had risen to prominence in the US and elsewhere in the period Srinivas (pp. 192–230) calls the short reign of high management common sense in the late 1970s. Moreover, the PMC's formation in the US coincides with his accounts of the ascendancy of management theory and practice over the 20th century. Barbara and John Ehrenreich first proposed the existence of the PMC (Ehrenreich and Ehrenreich, <span>1977a</span>), arguing that it consisted of ‘salaried mental workers who do not own the means of production, and whose major function in the social division of labour may be described as the reproduction of capitalist culture and capitalist class relations … as manager of capitalist enterprises (such as) corporations, government agencies, and universities’ (Ehrenreich and Ehrenreich, <span>1977b</span>: 7). NGOs, at least large ones, should be added to this list today. The PMC's core professions — including economists, doctors, lawyers, social scientists, accountants and design professionals, such as engineers and architects — have been essential to the creation and functioning of development across its various iterations.4</p><p>While the PMC has played a significant role in progressive struggles from the 1960s to the present day (Ehrenreich and Ehrenreich, <span>2013</span>), its relationships with other classes are fraught with antagonism. Contemporary critics characterize members of the PMC as ‘opportunistic’ (Frost, <span>2019</span>) ‘virtue hoarders’ (Liu, <span>2020</span>), appropriating the creativity, initiative and spaces of other labouring classes (Graeber, <span>2014</span>). While the PMC has gained significant influence through realms of civil society traditionally associated with progressive social movements, all but its most privileged members have been losing ground in academia (Cowan, <span>2014</span>), arguably the realm most essential to the PMC's reproduction and influence (Graeber, <span>2014</span>). By no coincidence, growing numbers of college graduates are finding themselves saddled with student debt without meaningful career opportunities. The PMC's future is thus imperilled as its members lose their coveted status as independent professionals. Nevertheless, their ability to enter effective class coalitions remains hampered by their perception of their inherent superiority and competence vis-à-vis other classes (Ehmsen and Scharenberg, <span>2013</span>).5</p><p>Given the current growth of aspiring management professionals entering the field of development, it is little surprise that Jenna Hanchey describes similar dynamics between Western volunteers and the Tanzanian people whom they imagine themselves to be saving. In the first part of <i>The Center Cannot Hold</i>, she engages the cultural fantasies and conditioned subjectivities of Western volunteers, which turn on their presumed superiority to others. Many volunteers she interviewed talked about ‘the white saviour complex’ and its role in reproducing colonial attitudes and relationships at Little Community. While seeing this complex in others, however, they consistently denied it in themselves. Hanchey analyses the psychological and rhetorical moves they make to navigate these realities while avoiding the painful confrontation of facing their own part in them, all the while reflecting on her own experiences in doing the same.</p><p>When volunteers experience disconcerting encounters with legacies of colonial violence, they tend to project onto African people, which Hanchey calls running towards innocence. Thus, they fail to hear what those others are trying to tell them at the time and through their memories of those encounters. In so doing, they actively maintain their ignorance of African ways of being and knowing, which is the basis of epistemic injustice. Regarding NGOs, this translates to a profound lack of recognition and appreciation for the competency, creativity and knowledge that African people bring to bear in making and running them. It also feeds normative and unrealistic perceptions of what NGOs should be doing. Their inevitable failure proves that they are ‘no-good organizations’, as a Mr Giles figure I once knew liked to call them playfully.</p><p>Both Hanchey and Srinivas conclude their books on NGOs with world-ending reflections. In the final section of his book, ‘Imagining Beyond the End’, Srinivas acknowledges the apparent hopelessness of our current situation, pointing to the proliferation of apocalyptic scenarios around us, and admits that ‘we appear to lack a conceptual vocabulary or confidence, as planetary inhabitants, to think through or past the crisis of contemporary capitalist force’ (p. 298). Nevertheless, he encourages us to explore non-utopian present possibilities for the pursuit of a more just future. With a nod to Walter Benjamin, he advocates a revitalization of critique as a means to ‘open the present by recognising other interpretations of the past’ (p. 299). He does this laudably through his reinterpretations of the past of development and management common sense.</p><p>Regarding his conclusion, however, I kept returning to a previous passage from just a couple of pages earlier, in which he raises a series of questions: ‘What now compromises a credible unit of development besides a nation-state? If professionals, including managers, no longer offer a credible claim to trusteeship, to whom should we turn? And with what knowledge?’. He concludes that these are indispensable questions for ‘tribal communities around the world, resisting disenfranchisement, as further material value is extracted from their territories’ (p. 297). There is much that I would like to raise in response to these questions, which is beyond the scope of this essay, regarding state power and ethnonationalism, knowledge sovereignty and Indigenous self-determination. Here, I will limit myself to noting that living onto-epistemologies of Indigenous and other historically marginalized peoples turn on possibilities well beyond the historical dialectics Srinivas promotes at the end of his book, including what is meant by the end of the world.</p><p>I deeply appreciate this open-ended ending and the crucial works of decolonial scholarship from which it is derived (Berry et al., <span>2017</span>; Gumbs, <span>2018</span>; Thiongo, <span>2014</span>). It calls me6 to haunted reflections of my own time in Tanzania and wherever else I may be. It likewise calls me to revisit la paperson's (<span>2017</span>) ‘uncovering the decolonizing ghost in the colonizing machine’ in <i>A Third University is Possible</i> and renewed consideration of decolonial possibilities at UVA in connection to the situations and relationships addressed in this essay.</p><p>In ending, it is also important to remember the potential of undoing to disrupt ‘the capacity to persevere in a liveable life’ (Butler, <span>2004</span>: 1) in relation to ‘collective continuance’, which refers to a community's capacity to flourish intergenerationally (Whyte, <span>2013</span>: 10). When I arrived in Tanzania in 1991, NGOs presented exciting possibilities for Indigenous collective continuance, and many people experienced them in these terms. Thus, they grieve at the undoing of NGOs and long for their redoing. Today, Maasai NGOs are embroiled in conflicts surrounding the removal and relocation of their communities from near Serengeti National Park and inside the Ngorongoro Conservation Area (Oakland Institute, <span>2022</span>; PINGO's Forum, <span>2023</span>). NGO leaders are being harassed and surveilled by the state, and some have withdrawn into exile.</p><p>It appears civil society is contracting as a realm of consent and contestation, while coercive state power is on the rise in conjunction with competing strains of populist ethnonationalism and technocratic progressive neoliberalism. This is the case not only in Tanzania but also in interconnected locations worldwide. Gramsci and others have noted that such arrangements are impossible to sustain and should be regarded as signalling endings. However, many people suffer as worlds are destroyed. Decolonial dreamwork orients and labours toward ‘a world in which many worlds could co-exist’ (Mignolo, <span>2007</span>: 499) through situations of despair.</p><p>In his ending of <i>Against NGOs</i>, Srinivas cautions against conflating pessimism and despair. Pessimism, he argues, is to ‘constantly interpret the present in terms of a fixed understanding of the past, one that offers precious little purchase for imagining other futures’ (p. 298). Despair is a ‘misrelation to a present … that can invigorate and impel change’ (ibid.). It is difficult to say how civil society paradigms may continue to matter to such endeavours. Robbie Shilliam (<span>2015</span>: 8), for one, urges maintaining ‘the democratic impulse’ of Gramscian genealogies while setting aside their framing concepts. ‘The seedbed of a decolonial project would not then be found in academic discourse but in the living knowledge traditions of colonized people … [that have] retained a tenacious thread of vitality that provides for the possibility of the retrieval of thought and action that addresses injustices in ways otherwise to the colonial science of the gaze’ (c.f. la paperson, <span>2017</span>: 33). These, Shilliam (<span>2015</span>: 30) avers, already constitute a ‘global infrastructure of anti-colonial connectivity’.</p><p>As for NGOs, they appear poised to persist as constituent elements of global institutional infrastructure for years to come, along with their distinctive, although unevenly distributed, potential for anti-colonial connectivity. Based on the insights gleaned from the studies reviewed in this essay, it is fair to say that normative understandings of NGOs — how they should be and what they should do — pose significant dangers. The studies also underscore the pivotal role of relationships in and around NGOs — as distinct from the NGOs themselves — emphasizing their necessity in conceiving and realizing futures that eschew hegemonic expectations of continuing capitalist and colonial realities. In the course of this essay, I have also attended to the growing connections between NGOs and universities, both with respect to the professional aspirations of the current generation of students and the rise of engaged decolonial scholarship. I end here in the spirit of the excellent studies that it has been my pleasure to read, review and engage — undone and unfinished.</p>","PeriodicalId":48194,"journal":{"name":"Development and Change","volume":"55 1","pages":"173-185"},"PeriodicalIF":3.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/dech.12816","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Development and Change","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/dech.12816","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"DEVELOPMENT STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Nidhi Srinivas, Against NGOs: A Critical Perspective on Civil Society, Management and Development. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022. 343 pp. £ 42.00 hardback.

Jenna H. Hanchey, The Center Cannot Hold: Decolonial Possibility and the Collapse of a Tanzanian NGO. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2023. 232 pp. £ 76.00 hardback.

The invitation to write an essay1 on Srinivas's Against NGOs: A Critical Perspective on Civil Society, Management and Development reached me as I was revisiting the Tanzanian village where I had begun my own research on NGOs 30 years before. Only that village was now a district headquarters and burgeoning urban centre. The state and ruling party dominated the scene architecturally, aesthetically and economically. The modest cluster of houses and shops I remembered from 1993 had morphed into a paved main road lined with electrified supermarkets, bars, restaurants and ATMs. The ancestral wells, which had provided water for Maasai people and livestock for generations immemorial, were surrounded by urban sprawl and said to be going dry. The dusty offices of community-based NGOs had disappeared, along with the flags of opposition parties. While this modern main street certainly bustled, it no longer crackled with the nervous energy of an emergent land rights movement.

One day, during this visit, I sat talking with a Maasai elder I had not seen since the 1990s. In the friendly way of people who had known each other once but never well, we waxed nostalgic about the heyday of Tanzania's Indigenous NGOs: short courses in participatory research methodologies, land rights workshops, grassroots protests and a community-based FM radio station. He then asked my professional opinion as to what had become of those promising NGOs and their dynamic leaders. Sad to be dampening our enthusiasm, I described how donor agendas and reporting requirements had moved NGO leaders away from their communities. Moreover, the state systematically harassed the most influential leaders, and competing donor agendas turned NGOs against each other. Many donors were quick to lose interest, making it difficult for Indigenous NGOs to sustain their own agendas and activities on behalf of their constituent communities. Under these pressures, some leaders burnt out, fell ill and even died. Others left for more secure opportunities in the development sector, academia and officialdom. Others faded into obscurity. Considering this, my old acquaintance asked if I thought such days could ever come again. Since they happened before, I reasoned, they could happen again. ‘Let us pray that they do’, he said. ‘Yes’, I agreed, ‘let us pray that they do’.

On my flight home, I recalled this conversation, noticed that it coincided with my agreement to review a book about NGOs that I had yet to read, and wondered if and how they were related. Back in my department at the University of Virginia (UVA), in Charlottesville, I found Against NGOs in my faculty mailbox. Throughout the fall term, I read through its 300 pages of far-ranging, though meticulously organized, arguments in fits and starts between my ample responsibilities as department chair. In retrospect, this intense reading experience was fundamental to my analysis in this essay. First, however, I needed to re-read the book. In the opening pages, Srinivas proposes moving away from normative NGO-centric analysis toward ‘a gaze that lingers on historical shifts in capitalism and their contemporary implications for development and management’ (p. 17). While this proposition struck me as straightforward enough, I was challenged by the extraordinary detail of his presentation in tracking the interconnections of capitalism, management and development through the heart of the book. I sometimes found myself losing track of his arguments while wondering about the relevant actors and intended audience.

In my second reading of the book, I concentrated on following Srinivas's arguments through the elaborate details of each chapter, facilitated by an accompanying table tracking elements of common sense (more on which below) across development doctrines through colonialism, state capitalism and financialization (pp. 292–93). Among other things, this focused approach helped me to situate and reconsider my own experiences and analyses of NGOs. As an aspiring development anthropologist in the 1980s, I came of age during the period of financialization on Srinivas's table, when NGOs were heralded as the ‘magic bullet’ solution (Edwards and Hulme, 1996: 5) to the failure of neoliberal market reforms. During my first semester of graduate school, my advisor was Allan Hoben, a prominent development anthropologist. He informed me that both the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the World Bank had established ‘NGO desks’ and told me that I should make NGOs the topic of my dissertation research. This turned out to be excellent advice.

The scholars who trained me began studying development in the 1960s, the United Nations's First Decade of Development. Their graduate school experiences corresponded to the apogee of modernization theory and management, as labelled by Srinivas (pp. 118–27). They then embarked on their professional careers during modernization's decline (pp. 138–41), a period marked roughly by the Tet Offensive in 1968 and the fall of Saigon in 1975 (see Ross, 1998). They made their names working for and critiquing USAID and the World Bank. Their research centred on the organizational imperative of ‘moving money’ efficiently and cost-effectively, in keeping with funding cycles (Hoben, 1980). Development bureaucrats coveted ‘fundable projects’ so much that they resorted to creating them. They were obsessed with their recipients’ ‘absorptive capacity’ and favoured high-profile infrastructure projects that could be funded by a few large loans to minimize their substantial processing costs (Tendler, 1975).

Studies like these challenged my young expectations of development, and even more so, as I learned about projects like the Chico Dam in the Philippines, the Transmigration Project in Indonesia and the Polonoroeste Highway Network in Brazil. These projects, cited by Srinivas (pp. 211–25), illustrate the effects of high-management hegemony in the latter half of the 1970s and were funded by the World Bank. I was particularly moved by Before the Bulldozer: The Nambiquara Indians and the World Bank (1989) by anthropologist David Price,2 who violated his confidentiality agreement with the World Bank to publish this ethnographic exposé of Polonoroeste. Development, as I was coming to know it, was less about the betterment of humanity than rapacious profiteering, which left borrower countries with debts they could not pay and harmed the environment while displacing and dispossessing Indigenous communities. In light of all this, a promising antidote appeared to be coalitions of Indigenous communities and NGOs.

Between portrayals of NGOs as vanguards of democracy and my professors’ assurances that they were the future of development, I was inspired to make a career of studying this putatively novel entity. My enthusiasm intensified after arriving in Tanzania in the early 1990s and learning that Maasai communities were starting their own NGOs as vehicles of community-based development and land rights advocacy. Over the following years, I was present through moments of NGO exuberance and NGO disappointment. Three decades later, I still ponder the dissonance between them, and I have had many conversations like the one recounted above. Through these, I have become convinced that those moments of exuberance manifest, however fleetingly, desirable futures for the constituents of Maasai NGOs.

Relative to this possibility, I am intrigued by Srinivas's call for a critical approach to these questions, which focuses less on NGOs per se than on what they reflect, and sometimes challenge, about broader capitalist formations, which are racial capitalist formations to be sure (Robinson, 2021). Jenna Hanchey's The Center Cannot Hold: Decolonial Possibility and the Collapse of a Tanzanian NGO offers a generative complement to Srinivas's Against NGOs, with its careful ethnographic attention to interactions between NGO dissolution and the decolonial possibilities that NGO emergence once promised. In the following section, I juxtapose the complementary perspectives of these two works to reassess remarkably enduring associations of NGOs, civil society and desirable futures.

While Srinivas's and Hanchey's respective books turn on remarkably different styles and perspectives, together they reflect a shared recognition of the importance of tending to both the specificity of NGOs and their communities, on the one hand, and the broader networks, processes and related concepts that reciprocally inform and influence specific NGO situations, on the other. Srinivas presents a broad history of NGOs in the immanence of their morphing capitalist milieus from their 19th-century colonial origins to the present day. His narrative is enriched by a wealth of curated examples of management doctrines, development practices and civil society (pp. 4–5). Hanchey, by contrast, delves into the nuanced history of a single Tanzanian NGO, which she calls Little Community, drawing from the discipline of rhetoric to connect her ethnographic narratives to wider structures and relationships. She characterizes rhetoric as ‘girdled by the nation-state in the formulations of public and civic life’ and endeavours to extend it ‘toward communal life as a global network’ (p. 12). Her framework and approach resonate with Srinivas's concerns regarding the common conflation of NGOs and civil society, which he sees as confounding the nuanced analysis needed to challenge the current backlash against NGOs as they fail in the impossible mission of managing capitalist development's socio-ecological contradictions.

Both scholars explicitly refrain from attributing these dynamics to some inherent pathology of NGOs. They emphasize instead their interactions with ‘broader structures of power’ (Beliso-De Jesús and Pierre, 2020: 66, cited on p. 12). Srinivas directs his attention to global capitalist formations and their management regimes, encompassing the doctrines and practices that influence the perception, functioning and current pathologization of NGOs. Conversely, Hanchey highlights the impacts of ‘global flows of racial and colonial power’ (p. 5) and their manifestations in specific NGO situations. She vividly portrays Little Community as a site of decolonial contestation, detailing the struggles of community leaders and NGO workers against the oppressive actions of Mr Giles, a British lodge owner and co-founder of the NGO. These actions involved his tyrannic control of the NGO board, exploitation of their labour and self-serving land deals that he ostensibly undertook on behalf of his NGO and community, but which ultimately benefited his lodge.

In concluding The Center Cannot Hold, Hanchey invokes one of the organizing concepts of Against NGOs: common sense, as formulated by Antonio Gramsci. In his explication of the concept in Against NGOs, Srinivas highlights its connections to civil society in Gramsci's (1971) Prison Notebooks while labouring to distinguish it from the related concept of hegemony (p. 30). He describes common sense as ‘incomplete efforts of perception on the part of interest groups, where some of these perceptions become naturalized within knowledge groups as perceptions of the world’, further arguing that ‘when these perceptions are acted upon, and attached to epistemic foundations that gain purchase within powerful networks of actors, they become hegemonic’ (p. 289). Bolstered by the power and resources of the ruling classes, hegemony is made to appear coherent, universal and unassailable. However, it is at least as fraught with contradictions and untruths as any other system of common sense. Civil society, in these formulations, is the realm in which hegemony is articulated and imposed and where its contradictions become vulnerable to contestation and transformation.

In the case of Little Community, Hanchey concludes that ‘decolonial dreamwork emerges from the gaps, from the holes in hegemony, in the spaces elided by “common sense” (p. 189). As ‘the act of imagining impossible futures in order to bring them into being’, Hanchey argues that conditions for decolonial dreamwork are enhanced as NGOs come unravelled by their colonial contradictions and ‘new potentialities are revealed’ (p. 19). In comparable terms, Srinivas relates common sense to the contradictions of capitalist accumulation. He argues that ‘its productive character is its capacity to naturalize a growing sense of administrative crisis and thus prevent it from becoming a legitimacy crisis’ (p. 291), as reflected in the current hegemonic celebration and pathologization of NGOs. Like Hanchey, he points to the increasingly visible unravelling of previously taken-for-granted arrangements, contemplating ways they might catalyse radical transformations in common sense. He notes that ‘the political potential of common sense and the activity of knowledge production work together’ (ibid.), invoking potential alliances between knowledge workers and civil society actors. I now turn to these possibilities, which have been my continuous motivation and frustration in the recent years of my career.

In my everyday work life at UVA, I have learned that the prevailing common sense regarding development revolves around two concepts: the global and engagements. Together, they turn on a distinct here and there. The global literally means far from a here that is iconically represented by Thomas Jefferson's Rotunda.3 Communities in need of development are imagined as somewhere out there, most likely in other countries. Engagements revolve around the imperative of students leaving the familiar here of UVA ‘grounds’, going out there in the ‘real world’, and having a ‘global experience’. The power of these concepts is reflected in the dramatic growth of Global Studies at UVA over the past decade. This pan-university programme turns on the hegemonic ‘global’ while aspiring to engender critical capacities and skills to challenge its hegemony and navigate the complex relationships and liberatory possibilities it elides.

Growing numbers of similar educational programmes worldwide represent critical emergent locations for the kinds of knowledge work that Srinivas sees as essential to ‘working through common sense perceptions of development and management’ so that ‘the current global spectres of capitalism can be exorcised’ (p. 300). His concern with the problematic equation of NGOs and civil society is especially salient here. In the hegemonic cartographies of institutions like UVA, where NGOs are imagined as out there in the ‘real world’, it follows, according to the prevailing common sense, that the academy and civil society should be regarded as separate realms.

In such contexts, it is essential to bear in mind that Gramsci's analysis is fundamentally grounded in the concept of social class (Crehan, 2016: 4). Accordingly, he viewed civil society as the realm of class struggle, in which some classes gain influence and become hegemonic (Mouffe, 1979), while others are marginalized as subalterns (Gramsci, 2021). ‘Civil society is the arena wherein the ruling class extends and reinforces its power by non-violent means’ (Buttigieg, 1995: 26) and one in which the ‘prevailing common sense’ (Wainwright, 2013: 165) might be contested and transformed by subaltern coalitions. Thus, as Srinivas asserts, it makes little sense to equate NGOs with civil society, as held by the prevailing development common sense. Likewise, the academy should be considered a pivotal site in the realm of civil society, in which intellectuals labour to produce the ideas and paradigms underpinning ruling class power and occasionally contest them.

Traditional intellectuals in this passage are ‘trained in the conceptual and philosophical elaboration of ideas and shaped as intellectuals within the existing academic infrastructure and its knowledge producing practices’ (ibid.: 22). However, they do not constitute an independent class with shared identities, autonomous institutions, and the resources necessary to pursue their collective interests. A key question here, therefore, is whether knowledge workers connected to development may indeed be construed as a distinctive social class. From a Gramscian perspective, Srinivas's distinction between knowledge workers and civil society actors appears to construe the former as traditional intellectuals without organic ties to civil society. Admittedly, that seems correct since Gramsci himself associated traditional intellectuals with academic and mid-level functionary professions, which these days include NGO workers. In light of Srinivas's central emphasis on the rise of management professionals, however, it is worth exploring the possibility that this group may constitute a distinct class and, if so, what their relationships with other classes might be like.

I am thinking specifically of the professional-managerial class (PMC), which had risen to prominence in the US and elsewhere in the period Srinivas (pp. 192–230) calls the short reign of high management common sense in the late 1970s. Moreover, the PMC's formation in the US coincides with his accounts of the ascendancy of management theory and practice over the 20th century. Barbara and John Ehrenreich first proposed the existence of the PMC (Ehrenreich and Ehrenreich, 1977a), arguing that it consisted of ‘salaried mental workers who do not own the means of production, and whose major function in the social division of labour may be described as the reproduction of capitalist culture and capitalist class relations … as manager of capitalist enterprises (such as) corporations, government agencies, and universities’ (Ehrenreich and Ehrenreich, 1977b: 7). NGOs, at least large ones, should be added to this list today. The PMC's core professions — including economists, doctors, lawyers, social scientists, accountants and design professionals, such as engineers and architects — have been essential to the creation and functioning of development across its various iterations.4

While the PMC has played a significant role in progressive struggles from the 1960s to the present day (Ehrenreich and Ehrenreich, 2013), its relationships with other classes are fraught with antagonism. Contemporary critics characterize members of the PMC as ‘opportunistic’ (Frost, 2019) ‘virtue hoarders’ (Liu, 2020), appropriating the creativity, initiative and spaces of other labouring classes (Graeber, 2014). While the PMC has gained significant influence through realms of civil society traditionally associated with progressive social movements, all but its most privileged members have been losing ground in academia (Cowan, 2014), arguably the realm most essential to the PMC's reproduction and influence (Graeber, 2014). By no coincidence, growing numbers of college graduates are finding themselves saddled with student debt without meaningful career opportunities. The PMC's future is thus imperilled as its members lose their coveted status as independent professionals. Nevertheless, their ability to enter effective class coalitions remains hampered by their perception of their inherent superiority and competence vis-à-vis other classes (Ehmsen and Scharenberg, 2013).5

Given the current growth of aspiring management professionals entering the field of development, it is little surprise that Jenna Hanchey describes similar dynamics between Western volunteers and the Tanzanian people whom they imagine themselves to be saving. In the first part of The Center Cannot Hold, she engages the cultural fantasies and conditioned subjectivities of Western volunteers, which turn on their presumed superiority to others. Many volunteers she interviewed talked about ‘the white saviour complex’ and its role in reproducing colonial attitudes and relationships at Little Community. While seeing this complex in others, however, they consistently denied it in themselves. Hanchey analyses the psychological and rhetorical moves they make to navigate these realities while avoiding the painful confrontation of facing their own part in them, all the while reflecting on her own experiences in doing the same.

When volunteers experience disconcerting encounters with legacies of colonial violence, they tend to project onto African people, which Hanchey calls running towards innocence. Thus, they fail to hear what those others are trying to tell them at the time and through their memories of those encounters. In so doing, they actively maintain their ignorance of African ways of being and knowing, which is the basis of epistemic injustice. Regarding NGOs, this translates to a profound lack of recognition and appreciation for the competency, creativity and knowledge that African people bring to bear in making and running them. It also feeds normative and unrealistic perceptions of what NGOs should be doing. Their inevitable failure proves that they are ‘no-good organizations’, as a Mr Giles figure I once knew liked to call them playfully.

Both Hanchey and Srinivas conclude their books on NGOs with world-ending reflections. In the final section of his book, ‘Imagining Beyond the End’, Srinivas acknowledges the apparent hopelessness of our current situation, pointing to the proliferation of apocalyptic scenarios around us, and admits that ‘we appear to lack a conceptual vocabulary or confidence, as planetary inhabitants, to think through or past the crisis of contemporary capitalist force’ (p. 298). Nevertheless, he encourages us to explore non-utopian present possibilities for the pursuit of a more just future. With a nod to Walter Benjamin, he advocates a revitalization of critique as a means to ‘open the present by recognising other interpretations of the past’ (p. 299). He does this laudably through his reinterpretations of the past of development and management common sense.

Regarding his conclusion, however, I kept returning to a previous passage from just a couple of pages earlier, in which he raises a series of questions: ‘What now compromises a credible unit of development besides a nation-state? If professionals, including managers, no longer offer a credible claim to trusteeship, to whom should we turn? And with what knowledge?’. He concludes that these are indispensable questions for ‘tribal communities around the world, resisting disenfranchisement, as further material value is extracted from their territories’ (p. 297). There is much that I would like to raise in response to these questions, which is beyond the scope of this essay, regarding state power and ethnonationalism, knowledge sovereignty and Indigenous self-determination. Here, I will limit myself to noting that living onto-epistemologies of Indigenous and other historically marginalized peoples turn on possibilities well beyond the historical dialectics Srinivas promotes at the end of his book, including what is meant by the end of the world.

I deeply appreciate this open-ended ending and the crucial works of decolonial scholarship from which it is derived (Berry et al., 2017; Gumbs, 2018; Thiongo, 2014). It calls me6 to haunted reflections of my own time in Tanzania and wherever else I may be. It likewise calls me to revisit la paperson's (2017) ‘uncovering the decolonizing ghost in the colonizing machine’ in A Third University is Possible and renewed consideration of decolonial possibilities at UVA in connection to the situations and relationships addressed in this essay.

In ending, it is also important to remember the potential of undoing to disrupt ‘the capacity to persevere in a liveable life’ (Butler, 2004: 1) in relation to ‘collective continuance’, which refers to a community's capacity to flourish intergenerationally (Whyte, 2013: 10). When I arrived in Tanzania in 1991, NGOs presented exciting possibilities for Indigenous collective continuance, and many people experienced them in these terms. Thus, they grieve at the undoing of NGOs and long for their redoing. Today, Maasai NGOs are embroiled in conflicts surrounding the removal and relocation of their communities from near Serengeti National Park and inside the Ngorongoro Conservation Area (Oakland Institute, 2022; PINGO's Forum, 2023). NGO leaders are being harassed and surveilled by the state, and some have withdrawn into exile.

It appears civil society is contracting as a realm of consent and contestation, while coercive state power is on the rise in conjunction with competing strains of populist ethnonationalism and technocratic progressive neoliberalism. This is the case not only in Tanzania but also in interconnected locations worldwide. Gramsci and others have noted that such arrangements are impossible to sustain and should be regarded as signalling endings. However, many people suffer as worlds are destroyed. Decolonial dreamwork orients and labours toward ‘a world in which many worlds could co-exist’ (Mignolo, 2007: 499) through situations of despair.

In his ending of Against NGOs, Srinivas cautions against conflating pessimism and despair. Pessimism, he argues, is to ‘constantly interpret the present in terms of a fixed understanding of the past, one that offers precious little purchase for imagining other futures’ (p. 298). Despair is a ‘misrelation to a present … that can invigorate and impel change’ (ibid.). It is difficult to say how civil society paradigms may continue to matter to such endeavours. Robbie Shilliam (2015: 8), for one, urges maintaining ‘the democratic impulse’ of Gramscian genealogies while setting aside their framing concepts. ‘The seedbed of a decolonial project would not then be found in academic discourse but in the living knowledge traditions of colonized people … [that have] retained a tenacious thread of vitality that provides for the possibility of the retrieval of thought and action that addresses injustices in ways otherwise to the colonial science of the gaze’ (c.f. la paperson, 2017: 33). These, Shilliam (2015: 30) avers, already constitute a ‘global infrastructure of anti-colonial connectivity’.

As for NGOs, they appear poised to persist as constituent elements of global institutional infrastructure for years to come, along with their distinctive, although unevenly distributed, potential for anti-colonial connectivity. Based on the insights gleaned from the studies reviewed in this essay, it is fair to say that normative understandings of NGOs — how they should be and what they should do — pose significant dangers. The studies also underscore the pivotal role of relationships in and around NGOs — as distinct from the NGOs themselves — emphasizing their necessity in conceiving and realizing futures that eschew hegemonic expectations of continuing capitalist and colonial realities. In the course of this essay, I have also attended to the growing connections between NGOs and universities, both with respect to the professional aspirations of the current generation of students and the rise of engaged decolonial scholarship. I end here in the spirit of the excellent studies that it has been my pleasure to read, review and engage — undone and unfinished.

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世界末日的非政府组织和民间社会
Nidhi Srinivas,《反对非政府组织》:公民社会、管理与发展的批判视角》。剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,2022 年。 343 pp.Jenna H. Hanchey, The Center Cannot Hold: Decolonial Possibility and the Collapse of a Tanzanian NGO.北卡罗来纳州达勒姆:杜克大学出版社,2023 年。 232 pp.英镑 76.00 精装本。应邀为斯利尼瓦斯的《反对非政府组织》撰写论文1:邀请我就斯里尼瓦斯的《反对非政府组织:对公民社会、管理和发展的批判性视角》一书撰写论文1 时,我正在重访 30 年前我开始研究非政府组织的坦桑尼亚村庄。只不过,那个村庄现在是一个地区总部和新兴的城市中心。国家和执政党在建筑、美学和经济方面都占据了主导地位。我记忆中 1993 年的那片简陋的房屋和商店群已经变成了一条铺设好的主干道,两旁是电气化超市、酒吧、餐馆和自动取款机。祖祖辈辈为马赛人和牲畜提供水源的水井被城市的扩张所包围,据说即将干涸。社区非政府组织尘土飞扬的办公室不见了,反对党的旗帜也不见了。虽然这条现代化的主干道确实熙熙攘攘,但已不再迸发出新兴土地权利运动的紧张活力。我们以曾经相识但从未熟识的友好方式,怀念坦桑尼亚土著非政府组织的鼎盛时期:参与式研究方法短期课程、土地权利研讨会、基层抗议活动和社区调频广播电台。然后,他问我对这些充满希望的非政府组织及其充满活力的领导人的专业看法。我很遗憾我们的热情被浇灭了,我描述了捐助方的议程和报告要求是如何让非政府组织领导人远离他们的社区的。此外,国家有计划地骚扰最有影响力的领导人,相互竞争的捐助者议程使非政府组织相互对立。许多捐助者很快就失去了兴趣,使土著非政府组织难以维持自己的议程和代表其成员社区开展的活动。在这些压力下,一些领导人焦头烂额、病倒甚至去世。另一些人则离开,到发展部门、学术界和官场寻求更有保障的机会。还有一些则默默无闻。考虑到这一点,我的老熟人问我是否认为这样的日子还会再来。我的理由是,既然曾经发生过,就有可能再次发生。他说:"让我们祈祷这种情况再次发生吧。在回家的飞机上,我回忆起这段对话,注意到它与我同意评论一本我还没有读过的关于非政府组织的书不谋而合,我想知道它们之间是否有联系以及如何联系。回到夏洛茨维尔弗吉尼亚大学(UVA)我所在的系后,我在教师信箱里发现了《反对非政府组织》一书。整个秋季学期,我在担任系主任的繁忙工作间隙,一气读完了这本长达 300 页、内容广泛但条理清晰的论著。现在回想起来,这段紧张的阅读经历是我撰写这篇文章的基础。不过,首先我需要重读这本书。在书的开篇,斯里尼瓦斯提出要摒弃以非政府组织为中心的规范性分析,转而 "关注资本主义的历史变迁及其对当代发展和管理的影响"(第 17 页)。虽然这一主张给我的印象足够直截了当,但他在全书核心部分追踪资本主义、管理和发展之间相互联系的非凡细节却给我带来了挑战。在我第二次阅读这本书时,我集中精力通过每一章的详细细节来追随斯里尼瓦斯的论点,并通过随书附带的表格,通过殖民主义、国家资本主义和金融化(第 292 页至第 93 页)来追踪发展理论中的常识要素(详见下文)。除其他外,这种重点突出的方法有助于我定位和重新考虑自己的经历以及对非政府组织的分析。20 世纪 80 年代,我作为一名有抱负的发展人类学家,正值斯里尼瓦斯提出的金融化时期,非政府组织被誉为解决新自由主义市场改革失败的 "灵丹妙药"(Edwards and Hulme, 1996: 5)。在研究生院的第一个学期,我的导师是著名的发展人类学家艾伦-霍本(Allan Hoben)。他告诉我,美国国际开发署(USAID)和世界银行都设立了 "非政府组织办公室",并告诉我应该把非政府组织作为我论文研究的主题。事实证明,这是一个极好的建议。
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Development and Change
Development and Change DEVELOPMENT STUDIES-
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期刊介绍: Development and Change is essential reading for anyone interested in development studies and social change. It publishes articles from a wide range of authors, both well-established specialists and young scholars, and is an important resource for: - social science faculties and research institutions - international development agencies and NGOs - graduate teachers and researchers - all those with a serious interest in the dynamics of development, from reflective activists to analytical practitioners
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