Visible Materials, Invisible People: How Branding in International Development Reproduces Inequality

IF 1.6 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Transforming Anthropology Pub Date : 2022-10-01 DOI:10.1111/traa.12238
R. Peters
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Abstract

A democratization program in postwar Angola offers an example of contemporary development work and its branding: donors’ bureaucratized practice of claiming credit for any attempt at social improvement while simultaneously distancing themselves from failures. Development branding achieves its claims‐making and distancing effects by emphasizing, in institutional narratives of development work, the role of material resources over the larger social contributions of local staff and beneficiaries. Development agencies’ increased bureaucratization, including their focus on branding, is not incidental to the undertaking but an outgrowth of shared histories; bureaucracy as social form, including institutional narratives emphasizing the material, and development as industry are both rooted in racialized and classed systems of hierarchical relations. Branding practices work to conceal and deepen these relations. A complete accounting of development must include attention to how—in form, action, and representation—it perpetuates historical relationships of inequality in addition to documenting their effects.
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看得见的材料,看不见的人:国际发展中的品牌如何再现不平等
战后安哥拉的一个民主化项目提供了当代发展工作及其烙印的一个例子:捐助者的官僚化做法是,对任何社会改善的尝试都声称自己有功劳,同时与失败保持距离。在发展工作的制度叙述中,发展品牌强调物质资源的作用,而不是当地工作人员和受益者的更大的社会贡献,从而实现了它的宣传和疏远效果。发展机构日益增加的官僚化,包括它们对品牌的关注,并不是这项事业的偶然结果,而是共同历史的产物;作为社会形式的官僚主义,包括强调物质的制度叙事,以及作为工业的发展,都植根于种族化和等级关系的等级系统。品牌实践的作用是隐藏和加深这些关系。对发展的完整描述必须包括关注它如何在形式、行动和表现上延续不平等的历史关系,以及记录它们的影响。
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