Development economist Hernando de Soto Polar has effectively advocated for property rights in the Third World, as his ideas have influenced the policies of the World Bank, International Monetary Fund and United Nations Development Programme. He envisions land titling as a means of lifting the poor out of poverty. I argue that his classical liberal interpretations of property and the good life are dangerously naive. One can see the dangers of de Soto’s imperialist and one-dimensional vision after considering the cultural destruction that results from his brand of development in pastoral Kenya. Also, this article demands a reframing of standardized development approaches. It argues that the conventional view is prone to creating unstable, cul...
Drylands, seen from the outside world, fall in the imaginary of the remote, the deserted, the unprod...
Development economics must be rethought. Not only has it hindered the liberation of the Global South...
The rush for land and resources has featured prominently in recent studies of sub-Saharan Africa. Of...
Hernando de Soto’s global best-seller, The Mystery of Capital, has transformed the previously obscur...
Presumption of a direct causal link between formalisation of property rights and economic productiv...
The 1995 constitution vested land in the Citizens of Uganda. Accordingly, in 1998, the Parliament pa...
The 7th annual Ethics ConferenceThe discourse on property rights has been intractable and part of Ke...
Culture, environment and, therefore, knowledge of socioeconomic constructs are intricately interwove...
A convincing case has been made in both academic studies and policy circles for clearly defined priv...
Creating private property rights and establishing land markets were fundamental to the historical de...
Creating private property rights and establishing land markets were fundamental to the historical de...
For over two decades now, Sub-Saharan Africa has been superimposed in a coercive and contradictory n...
In this article, I consider whether there are values intrinsic to development theory and practice th...
This paper deals with the disjuncture between recognition of the important role of culture in sustai...
In the developed world, we tend to think of sustainability as a newly articulated solution to challe...
Drylands, seen from the outside world, fall in the imaginary of the remote, the deserted, the unprod...
Development economics must be rethought. Not only has it hindered the liberation of the Global South...
The rush for land and resources has featured prominently in recent studies of sub-Saharan Africa. Of...
Hernando de Soto’s global best-seller, The Mystery of Capital, has transformed the previously obscur...
Presumption of a direct causal link between formalisation of property rights and economic productiv...
The 1995 constitution vested land in the Citizens of Uganda. Accordingly, in 1998, the Parliament pa...
The 7th annual Ethics ConferenceThe discourse on property rights has been intractable and part of Ke...
Culture, environment and, therefore, knowledge of socioeconomic constructs are intricately interwove...
A convincing case has been made in both academic studies and policy circles for clearly defined priv...
Creating private property rights and establishing land markets were fundamental to the historical de...
Creating private property rights and establishing land markets were fundamental to the historical de...
For over two decades now, Sub-Saharan Africa has been superimposed in a coercive and contradictory n...
In this article, I consider whether there are values intrinsic to development theory and practice th...
This paper deals with the disjuncture between recognition of the important role of culture in sustai...
In the developed world, we tend to think of sustainability as a newly articulated solution to challe...
Drylands, seen from the outside world, fall in the imaginary of the remote, the deserted, the unprod...
Development economics must be rethought. Not only has it hindered the liberation of the Global South...
The rush for land and resources has featured prominently in recent studies of sub-Saharan Africa. Of...