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Introduction
to Cultural Anthropology
SOC401
VU
Lesson
40
ANTHROPOLOGY
AND DEVELOPMENT (Continued)
Development
and Change
From
an anthropological point of view, culture
is an asset, even though
managing it is difficult
since
cultures
change and do not have
sharp borders.
Examples
of development planners' and development
workers' ignorance of local culture,
have had
devastating
repercussions on the local level.
What
Development Anthropologists do
Development
anthropologists in interpret practices
which are difficult for
others to access who lack
detailed
comparative
knowledge of social organization: gender,
kinship, property
resources.
Anthropological
input is often restricted to
appraisal and analysis of planned
outcome failures.
Besides
international
development, use of applied anthropology
has grown in the West as
well.
Anthropology
in the US and in South America is often
associated with cultural brokerage
between
indigenous
groups and national
governments, and between indigenous
groups and private
companies, often
those
associated with natural resource
extraction.
Changing
Notion of Development
Development
necessitates a kind of social
analysis of the situations which the
proposed intervention will
be
designed
to address. From an anthropological
view, this essentially requires
matching two representations
of
reality,
that of development practioners and
that of local environments.
Research
on development and culture during the
past years has emphasized a
culture-sensitive approach in
development.
Emphasis on people undertaking their own
development, instead of imposing development
on
them, it is suggested that
research into local culture is
one of the most important
features for ensuring
participatory
development.
Participation
means that development should involve
all its stakeholders. Even
the World Bank has
recognized
the complex local environments in which development
policy was supposed to
operate and had
failed
was due to lack of
participation. A modified policy
discourse spoke the need to include
local people,
civil
society, and social networks in
planning and
implementation
Contentions
in Development
If
anthropology has conventionally
been suspicious of unplanned changes, it
has been particularly
distrustful
of directed change and of the
international development project which
has had directed
change
as
its objective.
The
ambivalent relationship between anthropology
and development has its origins in the
colonial systems
of
governance. British anthropology
strove to be useful to `practical
men' of colonial administration in
the
1930's
to access public funds. In France,
anthropological methods were
used to improve
colonial
government.
This
history accounts for the
suspicion with which
anthropology is still viewed in many
countries which
have
a fairly recent history of
colonial domination.
86
Introduction
to Cultural Anthropology
SOC401
VU
A
New Role for
Anthropologists
The
involvement of anthropology in development
did not end with the dawning
of the post-colonial era.
The
inclusion of the discipline in the institutional
structures of international development
from the late
1970's
on has created a number of
anthropological positions within development
agencies.
Induction
of anthropologists in development agencies in the
1980's and 1990's coincided
with a new people
oriented
discourse in international development
and a renewed focus on
social exclusion and
marginality.
Useful
Terms
Contentions
controversies
or opposing points of view
Conventionally
-
standardized way of doing
something
Natural
resource extraction extraction of
resources from the natural environment
(from the land or the
sea)
for productive
purposes
Post
-Colonial the time
period commencing after the colonization
period is over, although the
influence
of
colonizing countries may
still remain after they have
physically vacated a
colony
Ambivalent
ambiguous or lacking a clear cut
definition
Suggested
Readings using Internet
Resources
In
addition to reading from the
textbook, please visit the
following web-site for this
lecture, which
provide
useful
and interesting information:
The
cultural process of development: Some
impressions of anthropologists working in
development
http://www.valt.helsinki.fi/kmi/Julkais/WPt/1998/WP898.HTM
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