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Community Development Sociology 130, Spring 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "Community Development Sociology 130, Spring 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 Community Development Sociology 130, Spring 2006

2 Development Philosophy Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Physical needs. Physical and emotional security. Social needs. Status, respect, power. Self-actualization.

3 History of Development Thought Modernization Theory Western nations as “the example.” Development = physical and economic growth. The global society: physically and culturally. Centralized planning coming from Western nations. Capital intensive technology. Individual blame approach to lack of modernization.

4 History of Development Thought Dependency Theory Economic leakage. Perpetual status. Environmental degradation. Social disruption. Loss of economic, political, cultural autonomy. Technological imperative. Pessimism about the opportunities for growth.

5 History of Development Thought Post-Modernism/Post Industrialism Rejection of the philosophy that people can have rational control over their natural and social surroundings. The emancipation of humanity is not achievable. There is no single truth of development. Universal values do not exist. Development is in the eye of the beholder?

6 History of Development Thought Neo-Liberalism Rise of globalization in the mid-1970’s. Increased interest in comparative advantage. Free-market ideology. Lack of state interference. “New modernity,” wherein the state assumes responsibility for its citizens. All ships rise with the tide, including those of the poor.

7 History of Development Thought Neo-Liberalism Critiques See critiques of modernization theory. The “new modernity” is simply neglecting responsibility to the poor. Neo-liberalism focuses on the needs of the power elite, leading to the pauperization of most persons.

8 History of Development Thought Summary Modernization: The poor should emulate us. Dependency: The poor cannot emulate us. Post-modernism: There is nothing to emulate! Neo-liberalism: Globalization will cure all ills.

9 Current Trends in Development Participatory, People-Centered Development Decisions about development goals, objectives, and the means to achieve these goals and objectives are decided by the people. Development must be sustainable (i.e., ecologically sound, cost-effective, local control). Modest and achievable goals. No utopias. Feedback on goals, objectives, methods of development.

10 Current Trends in Development Participatory, People-Centered Development Appropriate technology. Sustainable technology. Informed technology. Control over technology. Place-based technology. Adaptive technological change.

11 Current Trends in Development Participatory, People-Centered Development Decentralized decision making. Participatory decision making. Iterative decision making. People as the planned beneficiaries. Informed experimentation and action.

12 Current Trends in Development Participatory, People-Centered Development Women in development. Gender in development.

13 Current Trends in Development Participatory, People-Centered Development Interdisciplinary focus. Integration of economic and social change. Addresses problems rather than symptoms. Goal of reduced welfare dependency. Emphasis on volunteerism. Emphasis on cultural diversity.

14 Current Trends in Development Participatory, People-Centered Development Create awareness. Focus on defined needs, goals, objectives. Monitoring and evaluation.

15 Current Trends in Development Obstacles to Participatory Development Customs and traditions. Lack of skills. Apathy. Depression. Tensions among competing groups. Macroeconomic and social forces. Resources for a more labor-intensive approach.


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