According to most reconstructions of development debates, poverty and social issues were not part of the development agenda until the 1960s. This paper shows, instead, that development practitioners and institutions addressed poverty and social issues already in the late 1940s and early 1950s. However, economic multilateral organizations soon marginalized those inclusive views and focused exclusively on economic growth. This paper discusses those early policy options and why they were marginalized. It argues that this happened for ideological reasons, specifically because of the ideological anti-New Deal post-war backlash and the adhesion of Western countries and multilateral organizations to what Charles Maier defined as the ‘politics of p...
In this paper I attempt to analyze in the context of neoliberal development the changes in the pover...
Since the 1990s, poverty and the ways to reducing it have become a central paradigm in development e...
In the postwar years, most Third World countries turned inward partly in response to what they thoug...
According to most reconstructions of development debates, poverty and social issues were not part of...
Development economics was born as a distinct disciplinary field in the aftermath of World War II, wh...
Historians of ideas have long considered the mixed economies established after World War II to be ch...
The article analyzes the World Bank’s action during Robert McNamara’s presidency, situating it in th...
Until the late 1960s, the World Bank presented itself as an institution devoted to making sound and ...
The idea of development has never belonged exclusively to the domain of the domestic politics. The f...
The World Bank is a major development and lending institution, and as such often sets important aspe...
Until the late 1960s, the World Bank presented itself as an institution devoted to making sound and ...
There was wide ranging debate in the 1950s and 1960s in the developing countries about the role of t...
This article deals with the ways in which development policies were implemented in the first years w...
Until the late 1960s, the World Bank presented itself as an institution devoted to sound and directl...
This study analyzes the relative effectiveness of economic growth and social welfare spending on pov...
In this paper I attempt to analyze in the context of neoliberal development the changes in the pover...
Since the 1990s, poverty and the ways to reducing it have become a central paradigm in development e...
In the postwar years, most Third World countries turned inward partly in response to what they thoug...
According to most reconstructions of development debates, poverty and social issues were not part of...
Development economics was born as a distinct disciplinary field in the aftermath of World War II, wh...
Historians of ideas have long considered the mixed economies established after World War II to be ch...
The article analyzes the World Bank’s action during Robert McNamara’s presidency, situating it in th...
Until the late 1960s, the World Bank presented itself as an institution devoted to making sound and ...
The idea of development has never belonged exclusively to the domain of the domestic politics. The f...
The World Bank is a major development and lending institution, and as such often sets important aspe...
Until the late 1960s, the World Bank presented itself as an institution devoted to making sound and ...
There was wide ranging debate in the 1950s and 1960s in the developing countries about the role of t...
This article deals with the ways in which development policies were implemented in the first years w...
Until the late 1960s, the World Bank presented itself as an institution devoted to sound and directl...
This study analyzes the relative effectiveness of economic growth and social welfare spending on pov...
In this paper I attempt to analyze in the context of neoliberal development the changes in the pover...
Since the 1990s, poverty and the ways to reducing it have become a central paradigm in development e...
In the postwar years, most Third World countries turned inward partly in response to what they thoug...