Towards a post-development era : essays in poverty, welfare and development / edited by Ngaire Chant, Sue Cochrane and Robyn Kennedy
Material type:
- 339.46 DAS
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Gandhi Smriti Library | 339.46 DAS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 57664 |
It is a monumental work that lays the founda tion of a new social science. It may well re place many of the existing approaches to social studies in course of time. As Dr. Yogendra Singh put it in one of his presidential remarks. where the theme was presented, the analysis, which the latter incorporates, provides a major critique of the contemporary civilisation. worth taking serious note of. The theme has since then been carefully studied by a galaxy. of intellectuals in different parts of the world.)
It all began in the early seventies when Prof. Dasgupta initially presented the theme at Bangkok in a seminar held under the joint auspices of, what was then known as the U.N.E.C.A.F.E. and the Fredrick EUBERT STIFTUNG. The original texts were first published in a brief form both in German and in English. The theme was later developed in great details that has now taken the shape of a comprehensive volume.
This book presents his analysis of the state of "welfare" and development as they are manifest today in two cultures of the globe namely the culture of the third world and that of the first. On the basis of this analysis Sugata has arrived at a thesis which has created much stir among the thinking people in many countries. He pleads for a new approach to change, one that will reject 'development' (which, he describes, as the last leg of imperialism) and opt for a "near poverty" or a "no misery" society. Any effort to reject this goal, and to pursue "deve lopment", Sugata argues, will increase, the misery of the poor in all countries of the globe. For development creates misery, it is the mother of distress. However well-meaning the governments be, they can never thus help the poor, Sugata argues, unless, their nations reject the norms of affluence and development.
Commenting on this thesis Prof. Eugene Pusich of Yugoslovia (1976) called for a serious examination of Sugata's analysis, as he found that much of what Sugata says is already taking place in the dark corners of the backyards of the affluent society. Dean Schotland of the Brandise University(U.S.A.) commenting about this very theme, in an international seminar, had called it a 'block buster' (1976). In Australia a group of academicians and practi tioners have set-up a "think tank" entitled the Human Resources Group on community development (1978) to examine these ideas further in the context of the Australian society.
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