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Anti-Politics Machine: Development, Depoliticization, and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho

Anti-Politics Machine: Development, Depoliticization, and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho
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Anti-Politics Machine: Development, Depoliticization, and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho

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504964024

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Description:

A case study of development in the Thaba-Tseka district of Lesotho during the period 1975 to 1984, which looks at the workings of the development industry in the country, and in particular at one development project.

Product Details:
Author: James Ferguson
Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Univ Of Minnesota Press
Publication Date: February 01, 1994
Language: English
ISBN: 0816624372
Product Length: 9.03 inches
Product Width: 6.08 inches
Product Height: 0.78 inches
Product Weight: 1.0 pounds
Package Length: 8.9 inches
Package Width: 5.9 inches
Package Height: 0.8 inches
Package Weight: 0.95 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 7 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:5.0 ( 7 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

9 of 10 found the following review helpful:

5A dose of realism  Sep 08, 1999

Ferguson's study of development projects in Lesotho brings a much needed dose of reality to the subject of modernization and aid. While others might stress the need for appropriate technology or bog the reader down in economic formulae, Ferguson examines the ways in which local and global politics influence the success of even the most carefully planned and well-meaning of projects. A must-read for anyone interested in the development business.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:

4Highly impressive critique of development  Apr 05, 2010
By autopoietic
Ferguson describes this book as "not principally a book about the Basotho people, or even about Lesotho; it is principally a book about the operation of the "international development" apparatus in a particular setting." His book is about the complex relation between the intentionality of planning in a development project in Lesotho and the strategic intelligibility of its outcomes, which turn out to be unintended, but instrumental in expanding state power and, at the same time, depoliticizing the power.

Against the backdrop of the swarm of development agencies in Lesotho, Africa, he employs a Foucauldian notion of discourse being a practice (to engage in a discourse is to do something). In a fascinating analysis, he shows how World Bank's country report on Lesotho summarily labels Lesotho as a subsistence-based economy with high population growth untouched by capitalism. Ferguson argues that Lesotho was, in fact, affected by capitalism as early at 1910, that the World Bank is not just wrong, but systematically wrong in its portrayal of Lesotho. He describes the case of the World-bank funded Thaba-Tseka project (1975-84), which was originally designed to convert mountainous regions into commercial livestock ranges by providing road connections and low-cost production techniques. He then details why the project failed to live up to its original goals.

To do so, Ferguson traverses back and forth between discourse analysis of development and ethnographic field work in his method. Such a lens provides an understanding of the reconfigurations, causalities, and particularities of each other. Furthermore, it helps me understand the processes, practices and phenomena as occurring within a larger context of discourse production, rather than appearing to act in isolation.

He could have provided a less personal epilogue, though, which is rather disappointing in highly impressive book.

A must for anyone engaging with development.

5 of 6 found the following review helpful:

5Anti-Politics Machine  Mar 09, 2008
By Cyril Fegue
Ferguson's book is a powerful analysis of the epistemological bottlenecks that plague development policy and the World Bank's approach in Africa. World Bank's economists usually put a discount upon rigorous social research requirements in the way they explain cause-effect relationships of the African economic deficits. With commanding persuasive force Ferguson shows how the peculiarities of the African context are dissolved in a (anti-contextual) cut-and-ready, illogical analytical framework, rendered 'logical' to best accommodate World Bank's internal bureaucratic rationality. One should not wonder why the policies born out of such an 'Anti-Politics Machine' by and large remain in de-phase with the very notion of development.

By
Cyril FEGUE



0 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5The Anti-Politics Machine, Great!  Nov 09, 2011
By Ironpen
This book arrived in adequate time and had very little wear and tear that you would expect from a used book. It looked hardly used and I have been very pleased with it.

0 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Well thought-out ethnography  Mar 18, 2010
By Chelsea S. Corbett
I was more or less forced to read this book because of my Anthropology of Development requirements, but I ended up thoroughly enjoying it. He really studies the Lesotho situation up, down, and sideways in order to paint a more accurate picture of the situation and effects of development planning. Anyone involved in development planning or projects should read this.

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