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Article: The Price of ProgressAuthor: Bodley
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Benefits
of progress for indigenous peoples are often illusory and detrimental.
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Progress
(“development”) pushed on people as way of getting at their resources.
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Measuring Quality of Life
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Usual Means: GNP, per capita income, employment
rates, literacy rates, consumption, doctors and hospital beds/1000, etc.
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Who needs development who doesn’t? Those who score low are considered in need of development
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Bodley – introduces argument by Goldschmidt: “Does progress or
economic development increase or decrease a given culture’s ability to satisfy
the physical and psychological needs of its
population, or its stability?” (e.g., nutritional status, mental
health, crime, family stability, relationship to natural resource base.)
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Development can lead to...
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*Work and dietary changes – (results in diabetes, hypertension,
obesity)
*Disrupting environmental balance – parasitic
diseases due to water contamination
*Overpopulation, urbanization and crowding – increase
in bacterial and parasitic diseases
Development can have negative affects however this does not mean that people throughout the world are worse off because
of developmentLife expectancy has risen dramatically since 1950 (increased in least
developed world from 30 years old to 60 years old)Nevertheless there is a price for progress
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How does development result in dietary changes?
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Voluntary
Adopting prestige food (white rice)
Involuntary
More time devoted to earning cash, less time to growing/procuring
traditional foods, increased consumption of processed foods
Forced
Elimination of traditional foods by powerful groups (e.g. forming
National Parks)
Negative impacts on nutrition
Example - Nauru is fattest nation of earth – 94% of adult population classified as
overweight (nation influenced by development)TeethModern diets are bad for teethTooth decay correlates with introduction of modern diets (processed
foods, high in sugar)
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Diseases of Development - Feghana Valley, Uzbekistan example
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Soviet Unions’ Transformation
-Extensive irrigation system built
-Shift from small farmers to state farming
-Shift from varied crops to mono-cropped cotton
Costs
-Dependence on imported food
-Dependence on international cotton market prices
-Environmental pollution (pesticides, chemical fertilizers)
Wither the Aral Sea? Lots of water evaporating, toxic dust – years of
sedimentary deposits of fertilizer and pesticides
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Article: The Ugly American Revisited (TAP)Author: James Brain
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Ignorance,
arrogance, and ethnocentrism of aid officials causing harm to US interests
abroad.
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Creates
hatred among those we want to “help”
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Ethnocentrism
of aid officials abroad hurts our chances of helping people abroad
Issue: Vested
Interests
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“There
is something in it for a lot of people.”
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Tanzanian (Elites): free vehicles, salaried jobs (low
level), new buildings, scholarships to USA – poor people of Tanzania are not
the primary beneficiaries of the projects
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Americans:
1. salaried jobs
(high level) with many perks (housing allowance, servants) – make a good
living, have a good lifestyle
2. contracts for US
institutions (universities).
The Ugly Americans
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AID
staff:
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Live
in mansions with servants and guards; never speak the local language; little,
if any, understanding of local culture; social contacts = local government
elites (NOT with the people they are supposedly helping); job is to envision
and shepherd toward completion multi-million dollar projects.
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Socioeconomic
disconnect!
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Why does USAID reject projects that are small-scale, cheap, technologically simple (e.g. water pumps powered by bicycles)?
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Not spectacular enough (US image issue) – wants to show people “look what we did for your country”· Small projects “too difficult to administer.”· No American institutions would make a profit – a lot of money going into development benefits US universities, companies, corporations Damn and Hydropower Generator, Nepal – don’t get involved in smaller projects – piping clean water into village, setting up inexpensive sanitation projects – little projects are more beneficial, the big project ultimately benefits the powerful
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USAID
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Offices
larger than many embassies
Signs
only in English (for educated elite)
American
employees with local knowledge (e.g. Swahili speakers) transferred elsewhere
(“too close to the natives”)
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USAID and its partnership with universities
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Grant
money as government subsidy to universities.
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Creating
“experts” who actually know very little about topic (farming) in target of
intervention (Africa) – experts created based on Midwestern farming approach –
don’t know much about local farming conditions in native country, ethnocentric
assumptions about how farming works in a different country
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Why does USAID persist?
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Vested
political and economic interests
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Make
allies
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Vested
Interests – Economic
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Article: The Anti-Politics MachineAuthor: Ferguson
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Critique of
Development
Lesotho – small
country in Africa
Invention of
“Isolation” – intervention philosophy, need to create rational for why
development needs to occur
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Portrayal
of country as “untouched” by modern economic development.
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Portrayal
of people as traditional peasants who are overpopulating the land
– huge problem of too many people, they are going to starve
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Portrayal
of economy as insufficient to provide for basic needs.
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Ignoring
colonial legacy and forces of globalization that lead to impoverishment.
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Agenda: Justification for “development” (an intervention
philosophy!)
Problem
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Developers’ Myth: Lesotho is nation of farmers.
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Hence,
development should focus on agriculture.
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Reality: Lesotho is nation of wage laborers (labor migration to
South Africa) – don’t consider their main economic activity as being farming
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When
locals don’t consider themselves to be farmers, development officials conclude
“they are mistaken.”
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Taking Politics Out of Development
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Large-scale
development schemes view local governments as neutral agents for change.
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Ignores
realities of power, political interests, and corruption.
Village
of wage laborers, peacefully engaging in their lives
Flow
of money from center to periphery
Development
is a machine for reinforcing and expanding state bureaucratic power – way of
controlling people’s lives from capital to hinterlands (involving police,
military based, development project HQ)
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Summary of main points of lecture
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Anthropologists critique development
Goal of development = improve people’s lives
Goal of development = increase equity
Development can increase socioeconomic stratification
(Brain’s Ugly American, USAID government graft creation of local development
elite)
Development as a machine for reinforcing power
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