Rshepher@gwu - Edu: The Anthropology of Development
Rshepher@gwu - Edu: The Anthropology of Development
Rshepher@gwu - Edu: The Anthropology of Development
Anthropology 3501.10
Fall 2012
This course examines the theoretical and practical implications of the process of
development as a planned intervention into social action. Our readings and
discussions are centered on the following questions about development and the role
it plays in contemporary life, both among Northern aid-giving states and Southern
targets of development.
Our discussions and readings will be organized into three broad themes:
1. The first section of the course will review the history of development as an idea,
ideology, and practice linked to and informed by the political project of the nation-
state, the nation-state's emergence as the globally predominant form of political
organization, and widely-held assumptions about historical progress that are rooted
in colonialism.
2. Section two of the course will focus on how development assistance is actually
practiced as a form of social interaction and how different actors react to this as a
form of social experience.
1
Required Texts:
• Scott, James. Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human
Condition Have Failed. Yale University Press, 1998. ISBN: 9780300078152.
Blackboard Files:
Evaluation Criteria
Your grade for this course will be based on three take-home essay examinations and
a development review. Each of the exam essays will count for 25%. For each essay,
you will receive the guiding question one week in advance, along with a grading
rubric. Each of these essays will be 5-7 double-spaced pages. A paper submitted one
2
academic day after the due date loses one grade. A paper submitted two academic
days after the due date loses two grades. No papers will be accepted after this date.
Paper extensions: in order to accommodate your needs, I make sure you have
a full week to write each essay. Short of a documented medical emergency, no
paper extensions are possible.
The fine print: The purpose of this course is to learn neither technical aspects of
implementing development projects, nor a set of vocational development business
skills. This is a course that examines what development is, how it has functioned as
a dominant ideology since World War II, and why it has failed to achieve so many of
its stated objectives.
SUPPORT FOR STUDENTS OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM: Any student who may
need an accommodation based on the potential impact of a disability should contact
the Disability Support Services office at 202-994-8250 in the Marvin Center, Suite
242, to establish eligibility and to coordinate reasonable accommodations. For
additional information please refer to: http://gwired.gwu.edu/dss/
3
http://gwired.gwu.edu/counsel/CounselingServices/AcademicSupportService
s
Course Outline
Week IV (9/17 & 9/21): Development and the Social Engineering of Life
Readings: Scott, Parts III & IV (181-358)
4
Week XI (11/5 & 11/9): Privatizing Development
Readings: Elyachar, Chapters 1-3
Week XII (11/12 & 11/16): The Free Market & Human Subjectivities
Readings: Elyachar, Chapters 4-7
5
Paper #I Guiding Question:
James Scott provides several examples to support his argument that what he calls
authoritarian high modernism dominated debates about progress and change in the
20th century. These include urban planning, agricultural production, village
development, and scientific forestry. Explain the concept of authoritarian high
modernism, providing context to your analysis by drawing on ONE of his examples.
Be sure to not just tell me what he says, you need to show this! After this, compare
and contrast his claims with what Crewe and Harrison argue are the key
assumptions of mainstream contemporary development theory. Again, focus on
ONE of their examples (gender, technology, culture, partnerships, or individual
motivation).
Paper #2 Question: Like paper #1, be specific and clear with your terms, cite
heavily, paraphrase accurately, avoid direct quotations, and be sure that you
address all parts of the question. Length is up to you, although less than 5 pages is
not sufficient.
Remember, you are analyzing these arguments, the evidence each uses in support of
her/his argument, and their respective methods. You are not writing a book review.
Use as materials the texts and at least two outside reviews from reputable journals.
6
Final Essay Question
You have spent the semester reading a range of ethnographic studies about the
forms of and limits to development interventions. The anthropological perspective
about the process and consequences of development interventions is summarized in
our final reading for this semester, Ananta Kumar Giri & Philip Van Ufford’s “A
Moral Critique of Development: Ethics, Esthetics, and Responsibility.”
For this final paper, your task is to first explain what Giri and Van Ufford argue and
then contextualize this in the context of our course. Tell me what they see as the
three-fold (or three staged) ‘history’ of development, and what each means. Explain
how these three parts fit together and anthropology’s role in this process. More
specifically, what do they demand from development practitioners and development
critics? Where do they take issue with Arturo Escobar and James Ferguson? Looking
back at the various authors you have read, who may or may not fit into their
scheme?
Finally, as an aside, please tell me what you think about the process, goals, and
workings of formal development interventions. This part is not gradable, but I do
want to hear what you think and believe.
This paper is due in class on Friday, December 7th. Per other assignments, your
paper should be 5-7 pages, fully cited, with minimal direct quotes.