What is it about?

What is development? Looking at some recent examples from Bangladesh, one might think that development is all about economic growth, industrialization, and becoming part of the 'consumer society'. My article critically questions these assumptions by analyzing examples from Bangladesh's energy sector as well as other examples given by development practitioners in Bangladesh, showing how such narrow-minded ideas of development simultaneously reduce and impoverish development.

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Why is it important?

By drawing on in-depth interviews with development practitioners in Bangladesh, my article demonstrates how the allegedly 'benign' and neutral concept of development is not something ‘inherently good’ that can be taken-for-granted or as a natural fact, but something that exists through certain mechanisms and ways of thinking that privilege Western practices and knowledge and oppress alternative visions of development, leading to a form of mal-development.

Perspectives

With ever-increasing inequality across the globe and an ever-increasing impact of climate change, it is time to question the Western-based development model of pursuing endless economic growth. As many studies show, it is exactly this model of 'development' which leads to the aforementioned issues in the first place. I hope my work can contribute a small part to inspire more people to reflect on such an important issue and provoke the emergence of urgently needed alternative visions to the Western standard model of development.

MR Christoph Neusiedl
City University of Hong Kong

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This page is a summary of: The deep marketisation of development in Bangladesh, Third World Quarterly, September 2016, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/01436597.2016.1229567.
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