About the Book
The development delusion in a globalized culture is a fascinating subject for informed debate and discussion. Fallacies of Development critiques the contemporary interventionist approach to social development. It offers a hermeneutical system of linkages that seeks to connect certain dots out of the box.
The kitsch of developmentalism lacks legitimacy, coherence and relevance in a “flattening” complex world. From nation-building to globalization, dualities of triumphs and tribulations mark a neoglobal order that breeds ‘de developmentality’ of chaos. If September 11 ominously heralded the end of a civil society, the hegemonic Iraq quagmire represents a perfect storm.
The present book signifies the symbiosis of human and social development as a mega project of global-social transformation. It attempts to offer a better understanding of the dialectics of oppression, exclusion, and other socio-political conundrums that incubate global unfreedom and dehumanization. In nine symbiotic chapters organized around three central themes, the book examines the paradoxy of development, unravels archeology of the “axis of
evil” and presents a design of new social development—an argument for the conviviality of a post-ideological coexistence—as a synthesis of Human-Social Development toward global renaissance.
The book calls for Enlightenment II, a new epoch in the evolution of human history promoting counter-hegemonic analyses, policies and programs. In a hopelessly divided world, the re emergence of barriers and walls, ubiquity of terror and counter-terror, and pervasive malaise of arrogance will not deliver a world without the scourges of poverty, intolerance and war. It’s not the culture of poverty, it’s the poverty of culture that continues to bedevil humanity. The flickers of New Social Development offer a way out of the paralysis of hope that thwarts human and social progress. This book is a compelling reading for all scientists, intellectuals, professionals, policy makers and students who cherish a dream of the future worth living.
Table of Contents: PART 1—PARADOXY OF DEVELOPMENT
1. Human-Social Development: Positivity and Paradox
2. The Ethics of Social Development
3. Archeology of Evil: Ideology and Dystopia
PART 2—EVILS OF SOCIAL EXCLUSION
4. Social Exclusions: Challenges for New Social Development
5. Globalization and Human Rights
6. The Other India
PART 3—NEW SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
7. New Internationalism
8. International Social Work: A Whiteman’s Burden?
9. Unification of Science: A Theory of Logical Humanism
Afterword
Epilogue: The End of Hubris
Index