Culture and public action /
edited by Vijayendra Rao and Michael Walton
- New Delhi Permanent Black 2004
- 442 p.
How does culture matter for development? Do certain societies have cultures which condemn them to poverty? Led by Amartya Sen and Arjun Appadurai, several topnotch anthropologists and economists contend here that culture is central to development, and that cultural processes are neither inherently good nor bad and never static. Rather, they are contested and evolving, and can be a source of profound social and economic transformation through their influence on aspirations and collective action; yet they can also be exploitative, exclusionary, and can lead to inequality.
Culture and Public Action includes case studies from India, China and Asia more generally, as well as from Africa and Latin America, which examine the role of culture in community-based development, ethnic conflict, famine relief, gender discrimination, and HIV-AIDS policy. The editors conclude by proposing how a "cultural lens" can better inform future research and public policy on development.
Accessible, balanced, and engaging, this book will be of interest to anyone concerned with the relationship between culture and economics, and the design and implementation of development policy.