Are you sure you want to reset the form?
Your mail has been sent successfully
Are you sure you want to remove the alert?
Your session is about to expire! You will be signed out in
Do you wish to stay signed in?
Glossary
Browse the list below for terms used in the book.
Absolute poverty– inability to command sufficient resources to meet minimum physical needs
Accountability – where officials are given responsibilities in the public interest and must report, justify and be judged on their actions
Adaptive preferences – the changes in aspirations and values as one’s social or economic circumstances change
Affluenza – a term used by Clive Hamilton and Richard Dennis (2005) to describe the disease of western affluence where more consumption is never adequate enough to satisfy desire
African socialism – forms of socialism practiced in many early post-independent African countries, characterised by Tanzania under Julius Nyerere. They tended towards non-alignment and rejected the large-scale industrialization associated with the Soviet model
Agency – the actions of human beings, individually or collectively, to shape their surrounding social world
Agribusiness – large-scale corporate agricultural firms
Allocative efficiency – optimum means of distributing resources
Alms bazaar – a phrase used to suggest that non-government organizations are in a competitive market for gaining government largesse and attracting funding
American century, The – a triumphalist phrase used during the 1990s associated with the ‘end of history’ suggesting that the end of the Cold War presented the USA with the might or authority to reshape the world as it so desired
Anarchism – a political philosophy and social movement that eschews hierarchical organization and treats any form of state power with deep suspicion
Annihilation of space through time – a phrase used to describe the process whereby the world becomes a smaller place due to technological change, better communication and more rapid transportation systems. It is also labelled’ time-space compression’
Anti-dam movements – social movements centred on protests against the damming of rivers for hydroelectric power. These projects have displaced millions of poor farmers, most of whom receive inadequate or no compensation (for India, see Roy 2002)
Anti-globalization movement – a broad coalition of groups around the world that reject corporate global capitalist expansion and demand more grass-roots control over social relations. It is associated with the World Social Forum
Ascribed characteristics – endowments that a person is born with or which one has no control over. Contrasted as a pattern variable with ‘achieved’ characteristics
Asymmetrical wars – forms of conflict between opponents of unequal strength, such as between an ethnic separatist movement and the state's armed forces, which are usually fought outside the boundaries of conventional warfare
Atomistic – philosophical approach based on discovering and analysing the components of systems and then examining their interactions
Autarchy – a development strategy based on closing off a national economy from the rest of the world economy
Authoritarianism – the centralization of power and authority in the hands of a small elite who severely limit the political rights and freedoms of citizens
Autocentric development – development that focuses on the resources within the nation-state
Basic Christian Communities – cooperative communities set up by lay preachers and church groups to improve the conditions of the poor. They are associated with the concept of conscientization
Basic Needs Approach – approach to poverty reduction that focuses of delivering essential services (food, water, education, health) usually through state mechanisms
Blowback – according to Johnson (2002), ‘the unintended and unexpected negative consequences of covert special operations that have been keep secret from the American people and, in most cases, from their elected representatives’
Brain drain – the transfer of valuable human resources, usually from poor countries to wealthier countries
Capabilities – a term employed by Sen to describe the substantive freedoms people need to live the lives they value
Capital flight – the withdrawal of money resources from a country, usually due to a perception that profit opportunities are declining due to a deteriorating economic climate or political unrest
Capitalist world– the regions of the world where market forces dominate the production, distribution and consumption of goods
Cartelization – the banding together of nations that produce specific goods in order to secure the best possible price for that commodity
Chains of production – a metaphor for the supply route from raw materials through to the production and distribution of products. Over the past few decades, supply chains have become longer, or more global, as more and more aspects of production have been subcontracted or farmed out to specialist firms
Chilean model, The – the form of socialism associated with late Salvador Allende, whose coalition government was elected to power in 1970 and overthrown in a military coup in 1973. It was democratic and linked to dependency perspectives
Chinese model, The – the form of socialism associated with the late Chairman Mao, characterised by autarchic economic development and political authoritarianism
Citizenship participation – the combination and integration of the social and political elements of development policy by recognizing the value of popular involvement in improving one’s conditions as a constituent element of the process of development
Civil society – defined by Gill (2000) as a society in which there are autonomous groups which aggregate the views and activities of individuals and which act to promote and defend the interests of those people, including against the state
Civilizational identity – a term employed by US political scientist Samuel Huntington to describe emerging forms of ‘imagined community’ associated with different and competing world cultures and religions
Clash of civilizations– a phrase associated with US political scientist Samuel Huntington which suggests a darker presentiment of the future than 1990s triumphalism surrounding Francis Fukuyama’s ‘end of history’ thesis. Huntington warned that the future would be dominated not by a clash of ideologies but by a struggle between competing worldviews based on fundamental religious/cultural differences that transcended national borders
Class analysis – large-scale groupings of people generally identified according to economic criteria
Cold War– the global geopolitical climate that emerged after the Second World War where the two Allied victors (USA and Soviet Union) became nuclear superpower adversaries. Their contrasting socio-economic systems became competing development models.
Colonialism- The annexation and direct government of one country by another
Combined and uneven development – a structuralist term indicating that developments in one part of the world economy are linked to developments in other parts and that some parts grow at the expense of other parts
Communism - according to Marx, the highest stage of human civilisation where people will give according to their abilities and receive according to their needs, and where the state will ‘wither away’ due to the end of class society. In the twentieth century, communism came to be associated with the authoritarian socio-economic system developed in the Soviet Union under Stalin, where all production, distribution and consumption was organised by the one party-state and civil society was closely monitored for dissent.
Community development – development from the grass-roots level involving local participation in decision-making
Comparative advantage – The ability to produce goods at a lower cost, relative to other goods, compared to another country. With perfect competition and undistorted markets, countries tend to export goods in which they have such comparative advantage
Competitive advantage – advantage gained over competitors by offering consumers greater perceived value, either through lower prices or greater benefits
Comprador class – a term employed by dependency theorists to denote a social group whose elevated domestic status is dependent on facilitating control by external powers
Conditionality – a condition whereby loans are approved on the agreement by the debtor to the lender that they take specific policy measures to reform their economic behaviour or political practices
Conscientization – a concept associated with the Brazilian educationalist Paolo Freire that describes the process whereby the actions of the poor to improve their conditions results in a greater understanding of the dominant power structures and therefore find themselves in a better position to challenge inequalities
Cooperatives – an association of persons who join together voluntarily to achieve common economic ends through the formation of a democratically controlled business organization
Co-option – the process whereby a person or groups outside of an organization are incorporated into the structure of decision-making of that organization
Counterhegemonic consciousness – any framework of analysis that rejects the dominant ideology, currently neoliberalism, and which posits a radically different alternative
Creative destruction – a term associated with the Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter to define the dynamic nature of capitalism. The search for profits and competitiveness cause goods and processes to be destroyed in order to make way for more efficient forms even though the old ones might still be functional
Cuban model, The – the form of socialism associated with President Castro since 1959, strongly linked to the Soviet Union until the early 1990s although with higher levels of welfare spending than most other Latin American capitalist countries
Cultural homogenization – the process whereby the variety of the world’s cultures disappear and are subsumed under a dominant culture
Cultural hybridization/creolization – the process whereby different cultures borrow from each other. Where different cultures intermix, this is sometimes called ‘multiculturalism’
Cultural imperialism – the imposition of one set of cultural values upon another country’s culture
Cultural polarization – the process whereby different cultures become more differentiated
Culture of poverty – a phrase associated with the US anthropologist Oscar Lewis that focuses on the tendency for the poor to reproduce norms, values and habits that reinforce poverty over generations
Debt moratorium – postponement of debt repayments pending their renegotiation
Debt peonage – a term used to describe the relationship between poor countries that borrow funds from international financial institutions that suggests that the borrower becomes a slave to the borrower, or dependent on the borrower
Decentralization – the delegation of authority to lower levels of an organization, to subnational levels of government or from state control to the market
Decline of the state – an approach to contemporary global analysis that argues that the power of nation states has been eroded through neoliberalism or through the growing power of transnational corporations or through the rise of multilateral global institutions.
Democratic deficit – There is no agreed definition of this term but it implies that political structures, organizations and decision-making processes are lacking in some aspects of democracy. For example, the term is defined by Murray Goot as ‘ the gap between the democratic ideal and the daily reality of democratic life’.
Democratization – the process whereby an increasing number of people gain greater control over decision-making procedures
Demonstration effect – the impact of an ideal, or a particular case, or events on other actors or institutions often with the purpose of persuading them to change their behaviour
Dependency – a power relationship whereby the development of a country is reliant on the actions of an external force
Dependency theory– a perspective founded on the premise that the problem of underdevelopment is related to the exploitation of poorer countries by wealthier countries
Development project – a term used by writers such as McMichael (2004) to define the sum total of effort expended by the world community since 1945 to overcome poverty and help the poorer countries catch up with wealthier ones
Developmental state – an interventionist state that actively plans to shape the direction of the economy and the activities of key industry sectors to maximize national economic growth
Distributional coalitions – special interest groups that lobby governments for favourable policy decisions
Distributional regime – term used by John Rapley to describe the broad means that governments use to allocate the fruits of growth and whether these means promote equality or inequality (i.e., Keynesian and neoliberal distributional regimes)
Double burden/double bind – a term used to describe the situation of women who are in the paid labour force while also carrying the main burden of domestic duties
Downward levelling – the pressure created by globally mobile capital to reduce the level of wages and working conditions through heightened competition. Also known as ‘the race to the bottom’
Drop the debt campaign – the on-going campaign by social movements to cancel or reschedule the debt owed by poorer countries to international financial institutions
Ecofeminism – feminist perspective that links gender inequalities and patriarchy to male domination of nature
Ecological footprint – a term used to express the effect that human productive activity has upon the biosphere and local environments (i.e., these can range from light or heavy footprints). Industrialization, especially post –Second World War industrialization has been associated with increasingly heavier footprints
Ecological threshold – the limit at which human activity draws from the planet, leaving less than before. ‘Overshooting’ that threshold means drawing more than the earth is capable of reproducing
Economic isolationism – the closing off of a country from external trade and information. It is associated with autarchic policies but also with external actions such as boycotts and sanctions
Economic reductionism – perspectives that relate social, cultural and political phenomena to underlying economic forces
Economies of scale – cost advantages gained through increased scale of production, expressed in lower unit costs for outputs
Electoralism – an approach that emphasizes elections as the key indicator of the health of a democracy
Embourgeoisement – the process of adopting middle-class values
Empire-lite – a term associated with the Canadian writer Michael Ignatieff suggesting that imperialist intervention remains an effective means of ensuring world order in the twenty-first century where state failure threatens global security, even if that imperialism is conducted in a softer and more humane manner than earlier forms of European imperialism
Emulators – countries that use the developmental experience of earlier developers as a model for their own aspirations for development
End of history – a phrase associated with the US political scientist Francis Fukuyama who argued at the end of the Cold War that now the USA – the embodiment of liberalism – had defeated its main adversary the USSR – the embodiment of totalitarianism – humanity’s historical search for a workable and peaceful social order had reached a conclusion
Endogenous forces – factors that have their origin within, or are germane to, a social system
Endowment factors – the physical, human and social capital of a specified territory
Enlightened self-interest – the idea that one’s own personal or group will benefit from also taking into account the needs and interests of some outsiders
Enlightenment – eighteenth century period in France and beyond during which absolutism was attacked and both liberty and the power of rationality were promoted
Environmental apartheid – a term used by the Indian writer Vandana Shiva to indicate that environmental degradation is paid for mostly by the poorest inhabitants of the earth while the wealthiest are able to displace the effects of their environmentally degrading activities to the poorest parts of the world
Environmentalism – generic term for social movements dedicated to issues surrounding ecosystem sustainability, heritage, biodiversity and wildlife preservation
Environmental determinism – the belief that social behaviour is principally shaped by the surrounding physical landscape or ecosystem
Environmental sustainability – defined by the Brundtland Commission as ‘ development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs’
Epistemic community – a group of like-minded experts that share and identify with a particular intellectual position
Equality of opportunity – condition where, or idea that, everyone should have an equal chance to achieve the benefits and rewards a society can offer
Equality of outcome– condition where, or belief that, everyone should possess the same set of goods, services and assets
Essentialism – any philosophical or political position that argues that human beings have a core essence underlying appearances that explains behaviour or action
Ethnocentricism – to examine the world from one’s own cultural viewpoint, failing to consider that other cultures order and understand the world from different perspectives
Ethnography – the direct study and observation of particular groups and cultures and the interpretation of their behaviour
Exogenous forces– factors that have their origin outside, or external to, a social system
Export processing zones – designated areas, usually within poorer countries, dedicated to the production activities of multinational corporations that take advantage of relatively cheaper labour and/or attractive taxation regimes. It is associated with the ‘new international division of labour’
Externalities – positive or negative consequences of activities that are not accounted for in market prices
Extreme poor– term employed in the Millennium Development Goals and by Jeffrey Sachs to describe households that are unable to meet their survival needs. Often measured as per capita income of under US$1 per day
False progress– the misuse of indicators and statistics to suggest that equitable development is taking place when in reality these statistics hide regional or social disparities that would reveal lack of progress for sections of a community
Feedback loop – at its most simple involving reciprocal interaction between variables but also referring to mechanisms which distinguish deviation in system behaviour and trigger efforts to return to equilibrium
Feminism – political stance and social movements that stands for gender equality
Feminization of work/housewifization – the tendency for some forms of work to become associated with women workers and to be accompanied by falling wages or poorer conditions
Financial deregulation – the opening up of national economies from the 1980s onwards through the liberalization of financial markets and floating exchange rates
Financing gap – the difference between a country’s financial development needs and the country’s savings for development purposes. Official Development Assistance (ODA) is often used to close the gap
Fiscal pump-priming – the use of supply-led growth using state spending to promote high levels of employment and adequate demand - associated with the economist John Maynard Keynes
Food commodity chains – the process involved in bringing food to the table from the imputs into production to actual production, distribution and consumption
Foreign direct investment- investment by individuals and firms from one country in the productive capacity of another country
Gender mainstreaming – according to the ILO, it is the process of assessing the implications for women and men of any planned action, including legislation, policies or programmes, in any area and at all levels
Glass ceiling – a metaphor to describe the situation where gender equity has been legally achieved although other social forces perpetuate male dominance and restrict upward social mobility by women
Global compact – a 1999 UN initiative that called upon transnational corporations to promote socially responsible and environmentally-sustaining business. By 2006 it included over 2,500 companies
Global financial architecture – the institutional structure governing the world economy
Global hegemony – the ideological domination of the world’s nations by a specific power in pursuit of its interests
Global imperative– the idea that global market forces dictate or influence every move that agents consider making
Global radicals – term used by British sociologist Anthony Giddens to describe commentators who argue that the process of globalization is a fundamentally new phenomenon
Global sceptics – term used by British sociologist Anthony Giddens to describe those who argue that globalization is merely a continuation of existing trends and has exacerbated inequality
Globalization – according to Robertson, the ‘compression of the world and the intensification of consciousness of the world as a whole’ or ‘the processes rendering the world as a whole as a single place’
Globalization from above – the existing structure of global political economy which is controlled by a small elite group of powerful corporations and influential political leaders
Globalization from below – the counterhegemonic approach to global power which works towards placing power in the hands of small-scale organizations and local agents
Governance – the means whereby power and authority flow through a community
Grand narratives – big-pictureunderstandings of the workings of reality or history that seek an underlying theme or a motive force that explains events and causation
Greenhouse gases – the gaseous component of the atmosphere made from naturally occurring process and human activity. Many scientists posit that the human productive activities are producing a harmful mix of these gases, resulting in the warming of the earth’s atmosphere and the creation of a greenhouse effect that will threaten life as we know it
Greenwash – a term used by some critics of corporate capitalism to suggest that firms often paint themselves with a veneer of environmentally-friendly rhetoric while continuing to act in an environmentally unfriendly manner
Gross Domestic Product per capita - the money value of all goods and services produced in a country over a year divided by the mid-year population
Growth regime – term used by John Rapley to describe the broad micro- and macro-economic policy setting used by governments to increase production (i.e., Keynesianism and neoliberal growth regimes)
Highly Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) – term adopted in the 1990s by the International Monetary Fund to identify the world’s poorest nations in order to reschedule or cancel part of their debt and case manage their transition to more sustainable levels of debt
Holistic – philosophical approach based on understanding the totality of a system and then explaining how components relate within that system
Human capital – human skills and capabilities generated by investments in education and health
Human Development Approach – the process of enlarging people’s choices by expanding their capabilities to lead long and healthy lives, to be knowledgeable, to have a decent standard of living and to participate actively in community life
Hypermodernity –the intensification of modernity’s characteristics based on accelerated technological change, the penetration of commodification into more areas of social existence and greater reflexivity in social relations
Ideal types – a 'unified analytical construct' (Weber, 1949), serving to define the most significant features of a social phenomenon for the purpose of explication. The ideal type is an intellectual creation, not the description of empirical reality
Ideological apparatuses – the institutions associated with the production and dissemination of knowledge, such as the education system and the media. The phrase suggests that these apparatuses tend to promote a specific worldview that maintains the status quo
Imagined communities – term used by Benedict Anderson to convey the idea that nations contain more people than any individual can know personally and that their sense of shared identity is constructed from myths and stories about the past
Imperialism – according to B.J. Cohen, ‘any relationship of effective domination or control, political or economic, direct or indirect, of one nation over another’
Import substitution – strategy used by nations to protect local industries through tariffs and quotas on more competitive imports and through subsidies and other incentives to produce locally
Individualistic perspectives – approaches to poverty and inequality that focus on the individual person or country to identify the attributes they lack
Inequalities across countries – inequalities measured using countries as the units of analysis
Inequalities across the world’s people – inequalities measured taking into account all the six billion people in the world
Inequalities within countries – inequalities between people residing in a specific country
Integrated development – a term used to emphasize that development is a multifaceted process and so requires transformations on many fronts, from health through to education and from social equity to political participation and that these changes often have a multiplier effect
Intergenerational inequality – the inequalities that occur between generations, such as leaving the planet in a worse state than the present generation found it, or leaving less capital than the present generation inherited
International circuits of capital – the cycle of investment, production, distribution, profit-making and reinvestment that crosses national boundaries
International division of labour – the distribution of production among the world’s countries
International financial institutions – a collective term for the principal global entities involved in governing and managing trade and development, including the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the World Trade Organization and regional banks such as the Asian Development Bank
Inverted U-Curve – a term first used by Kuznets to indicate that the process of modern growth is initially accompanied by growing levels of inequality before gradually narrowing
Invisible continent – term employed by the Japanese writer Kenichi Ohmae to describe how the modern global economy and global financial flows escape the monitoring capacity of the nation state. It is associated with the ‘decline of the state’ thesis
Invisible hand – term coined by Scottish classical political economist Adam Smith as a metaphor to explain the positive effects of untrammelled market forces
Jubilee campaign – a movement organized by church groups leading up to the 50 th anniversary of the Bretton Woods Agreement that campaigned to drop the debt of poorer nations
Just-in-time management systems – work scheduling aimed at inventory free production and distribution through ensuring that goods are produced at the moment they are required. It is associated with ‘flexible specialization’ and attempts to remove the rigidities of mass production or ‘fordism’. Consequently, also known as ‘post-fordism’
Keynesian – the use of supply-led growth using state spending to promote high levels of employment and adequate demand. Named after the British economist J.M. Keynes
Khruschchev’s denunciation of Stalin– in 1956, the leader of the USSR, Nikita Khruschchev delivered a speech at the end of the 20 th Communist Party Congress in which he denounced the crimes of his predecessor Joseph Stalin as a distortion from the socialist path
Layered governance – the notion that power has become more diffuse as nation states coexist and interact with sub-national and multinational forms of governance
Level playing field– a phrase associated with neoliberalism that described an ideal economic climate where each actor is able to negotiate and choose their options free of socially-imposed distortions
Limits to growth – a phrase associated with the ‘Club of Rome’ report (1972) that warned that industrial productive activity was unsustainable and that humans had to develop alternative means of production. The report rejected the fetish for economic growth and heavy reliance on non-renewable resources
Linearism – the belief that history moves in a specific direction along a particular path according to some motive force
Luddites – early nineteenth century English workers who set about wrecking innovative machinery that dispensed with their skills and therefore their livelihoods
Make poverty history campaign – a campaign associated with various social movements publicizing and supporting the alleviation of global poverty
Make trade fair campaign – a campaign associated with various non-government organizations aimed at reshaping global trade to assist poorer countries and improving the conditions of exploited workers throughout the world
Marginalization – the process whereby individuals, groups or regions become peripheral to the needs of a system
McDonaldization – a phrase associated with the US sociologist George Ritzer than sees the multinational corporation McDonalds as the epitome of the Weberian process of rationalization and standardization
Methodological territorialism – approach to global politics that is based on nation-states as bounded physical entities that interact with other such entities
Micro-electronic innovations – a series of technological innovations based on information technologies and computer-assisted design and manufacturing that sped up information flows and production processes from the mid-1970s onwards
Millennium Development Goals – a set of measurable targets agreed upon by the world’s leaders in 2000 that aims to halve global poverty by 2015
Modernity – the period of human history after the Middle Ages, built on the foundations of the Renaissance, the discovery of the New World and the rise of science, the Enlightenment and rationality
Modernization theory – a perspective on development that assumes that all societies move in a linear direction from tradition to modernity and which attempts to understand the dynamics and problems of this transition
Monocultural equality – an equality based on cultural sameness
Movement fatigue – the tendency for some organizations to lose direction or momentum over time either through changing circumstances or crises of leadership
Multinational corporation – a large company that has significant operations in many countries but which is generally coordinated globally from a centralized head office
Neo-classical economics – approach to economics and the social sciences that emphasizes the ideas of rational actors, informed choice and unimpeded markets
Neocolonialism – a relationship in which 'supposedly independent societies and their sovereign governments were found to be lacking in control of their economies' (Smith, B., 2003, p. 76)
Neoconservatism – a political movement based in the USA that gathered strength from the late 1970s onwards arguing for American exceptionalism and the promotion of American ideals of political and economic liberty. It adopted a bellicose approach to the USSR and after the Cold War supported the export of American ideals to other countries. Supporters are also known as ‘neo-cons’
Neo-liberalism – contemporary resurgence of neo-classical economics, defined by Kay (2003, 308) as ‘self-interest rules, market fundamentalism, the minimal state, low taxation’
New international division of labour– the reorganization of global production from the 1970s onwards occasioned by the development of newly industrializing countries which resulted in a shift of some manufacturing operations away from the advanced capitalist countries towards East Asia and other developing nations such as Mexico and Brazil
New International Economic Order – a demand by poorer countries during the 1970s within the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development [UNCTAD] to secure a more favourable and fairer international trading system
New social movements – political groups – often loosely organized - that exist outside the structure of party or institutional politics and aim to reshape an aspect or aspects of contemporary social relations
Newly Industrializing Countries – defined by Hettne (1995) as ‘ the most recent wave of industrialization which has taken place in a limited number of countries in different regions: Latin America, South East Asia and Southern Europe’
Non-Aligned Movement – a group of newly independent countries that was formally established in the 1950s after a conference in Bandung, Indonesia, based on a perception that the interests of neither Cold War superpower coincided with those of the poorer countries of the world and that the poorer nations should remain aloof from the superpowers’ global political posturing and develop an independent road to development
Non-government organization – any formal organization within civil society that operates to further a specific cause or causes and is not beholden to governmental authorities, even though it might receive some governmental grants
Nutritional insecurity – the loss of capacity of a person or group to feed themselves resulting the reliance on other groups’ food supplies
OECD countries – the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development represents 30 of the world’s wealthier countries who claim to be committed to democratic practice and free trade
Official development assistance (ODA)- grants and concessional loans for the promotion of economic development and welfare for poorer countries from governments of richer countries. A UN declaration in 1970 called upon the richer countries to devote 0.7 per cent of GNP to ODA.
Orientalism – the study by western academics of Eastern cultures. The Palestian writer Edward Said uses the term to explain how western writers used orientalism to define and position the west as superior to the traditional and exotic cultures they were studying
Participation – active involvement of citizens in decision-making that is distinguishable from passive representation
Participative Rural Appraisal – a more experiential, empowering version of Rapid Rural Appraisal which incorporates the voices of the poor themselves allowing them to participate according to their definition of their situation
Patrimonial leaders – a leader who wins allegiance of key supporters by the distribution of favours such as contracts, monopolies, and offices. The capacity to distribute such benefits is derived from the leader's dominant position in the state
Pattern variables – a set of ideal-type choices that people face when confronted with the need to act. These choices are divided between traditional actions and modern actions
Pax Americana – literally, the American peace, the period of US global hegemony of the western world after the Second World War. Some commentators use it to describe the post-Cold War era of global US dominance. It hints at the idea of the USA as an imperial power
Peace dividend – the bonus that the global community expected after the Cold War where new resources and opportunities would be reoriented towards meeting the needs of development and increasing well-being
People power movements – generally non-violent broad-based movements from below aimed at overthrowing authoritarian political structures and leaders
Pink-collar jobs – work tasks, often socially devalued and poorly paid, that come to be dominated by women workers
Postdevelopment – perspectives discussed in detail in Chapter 9 that reject the philosophical, methodological and political basis of the ‘development project’, viewing it as a means of maintaining rich country control over poorer countries
Post-industrial society – a term associated with the US sociologist Daniel Bell who argued in the 1970s that modern societies were entering a new phase characterised by the declining importance of manufacturing and the rise of a service and information economy. Under these conditions, power would gravitate towards technocrats and other experts who controlled information
Post-materialism – a term associated with the US psychologist Ronald Inglehart that described a worldview that looks beyond the satisfaction of physical needs towards issues surrounding the quality of life. Inglehart linked younger members of western society and the more affluent with post-materialist views
Postmodernism – philosophical perspectives that either reject or have moved beyond modernism. They reject the grand narratives associated with modernism and tend towards a more subjective appreciation of the world, and celebrate difference and identity politics
Poverty lines – statistical measure, usually set at one half of median family income, below which households are defined as being in poverty
Poverty Reduction Strategies – detailed commitments that poorer countries prepare in order to access development assistance funds from international financial institutions
Power – the ability to impose one’s will upon another, with or without their consent
Precautionary principle – an axiom based on the belief that it is better to be safe than sorry when dealing with global environmental issues. Even though full scientific evidence might not be available, it is sensible to ‘forecare’ for the biosphere by limiting actions that have the possibility of degrading the environment further
Progress – an understanding of history that suggests improvement through learning from experience and the gaining of greater understanding
Protectionism – the use of import taxes or import quotas and other state-decreed measures that artificially raise the price of foreign goods, usually with the view of ensuring the profitability of locally-produced goods. Protectionism can either affect specific industry sectors, or can be applied ‘across the board’
Prototype – country whose developmental experience is later used as a guide for the development path of other countries
Purchasing Power Parity – ‘ rate of exchange that accounts for price differences across countries allowing international comparisons of real output and incomes' (UNDP 2004, p. 274)
Purposeless change - a term used by John Gray to contrast with the dominant understanding of change-as-progress or change-as-meaningful. Opposing modern arrogance, it suggests that modern societies drift rather being directed by rational action.
Rapid Rural Appraisal – a method of participatory enquiry into rural economy and society involving, according to Chambers (1993) ‘semi-structured interviewing, methods for team interactions, transects, sketch mapping, and flow, decision-tree and causal diagramming’
Rational choice analysis– an alternative term for neo-classical economic analysis, focusing on the rational behaviour of fully-informed individuals as the building blocks of social life
Really-existing socialism – a term used to describe the USSR and its eastern European satellites, distinguishing their actual relations from the socialism described by Marx and Lenin
Regimes of truth – a term associated with the French philosopher Michel Foucault to describe the process whereby certain ways of understanding the world come to be seen as the correct or natural way to appropriate reality. It suggests that the concept of truth needs to be historicized
Relative poverty– inability to maintain the standard of living that is considered appropriate for life in a specific cultural setting
Romanticism – nineteenth century artistic and literary movement that rejected industrialization and looked to seek the essence of humanity in closer bonds with nature
Sandinista model – the form of socialism associated with the Nicaraguan government between 1979 and 1990. While it claimed broad-based support, held elections and encouraged mass participation, successive US governments sponsored a covert war against the regime that finally wore out its reserves
Scheduled tribes – marginalized Indian communities or castes that were determined through heredity and traditionally labelled ‘outcasts’ and who undertook the most menial labour tasks
Secularization – the process of disenchantment with religious values and/or the separation of powers between the church and state
Self-critical epistemological awareness – a consciousness of the need to reflect upon one’s underlying assumptions in the light of one’s actions and observations. Associated with the concept of ‘reflexivity’
Social capital – the sum total of relationships and networks with their corresponding degrees of trust and cooperation that a community possesses
Social equilibrium – term used mainly by structural functionalists (and modernization theorists) to describe a social system in which each of the component parts operate in a mutually-supportive manner
Social norms– the values and behaviours considered appropriate within a specific cultural setting
Social polarization – the process whereby a society becomes increasingly divided by a growing gap between the wealthy and the poor
Socialization– the processes through which members learn the norms appropriate to that society
Soft states – nation-states whose power and authority are contested by societal and/or external sources of power and authority
Statism – the use of state power rather than market power to effect developmental goals
Stigmatization – the demeaning or devaluing of a person or social group through labelling or negative stereotyping
Structural adjustment programme – a series of reforms or conditions demanded of borrowers by the International Monetary Fund designed to liberalize the economy of the borrower, open the economy to the world market and cut public expenditure
Structural functionalism – sociological theory popular after the Second World War and associated with Talcott Parsons that stresses social equilibrium and value consensus as defining characteristics of a social order. All social institutions exist to fulfil some need for social reproduction
Structural irrelevance – a term used to describe people, or groups or areas than have become marginal to the global economy
Structuralist perspectives – approaches to poverty and inequality that focus on the relations between people or countries to determine how power is maintained and distributed
Subaltern studies – term first used by Indian postcolonial writers to define the study of those marginalised or exploited by the process of European imperialism. Subaltern studies focus on rewriting history ‘from below’, using the voices of those who have been silenced by western discourses
– a term popularized by W.W. Rostow and used subsequently in development theories to describe the developmental period where traditional values and forces no longer hold and where the dynamics of modern economic growth becomes self-sustaining. Economic growth rates during this period are usually high
Teleological planning – goal-oriented programmes that begin with imagining the desired end and shaping action accordingly
Terms of trade – the relative price of a country's exports compared to its imports
Three waves of democratization – phrase associated with Samuel Huntington to describe the bumpy road of democratization during the twentieth century, accounting for its ebbs and flows
TINA principle – an acronym for ‘There is no alternative’ attributed to former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher that suggests that the liberalization of the market and social relations is the only way to effectively achieve social objectives
Traditional society – any pre-modern society, or society before modern European contact
Transfer pricing – schemes used by companies that produce goods and services across countries in order to minimize taxation through exaggerating the value added at points where taxation is lowest.
Transnational capital – capital that crosses national boundaries
Transnational capitalist class – a term used by Lesley Sklair and W.I. Robinson to describe a new multicultural ruling class based not on the control of locally-based capital, but on mobile global capital and influential multilateral organizations
Transnational corporation - firms that organise their strategic, design, productive, technological, marketing and distributive functions across the globe, rather than in separate countries
Trickle-down theory - the idea that the benefits of economic growth will be passed down through the economy from the wealthy to the poor thus raising the overall welfare of the population
Triumphalism – a sentiment which pervaded liberal and conservative circles within the west that optimistically looked forward to a New World Order led by the USA unimpeded by the threat of communism
UN Millennium Project – the body set up by the UN and directed by the US economist Jeffrey Sachs to support and promote the Millennium Development Goals
Underground economy– economic activity that takes place outside the formal economy. It includes illicit drug production, distribution and consumption, illegal sweatshops and ‘under-the-counter’ payments for goods and services. Also known as ‘off-the-books’ due to its association with tax avoidance
Unequal exchange – a concept associated with dependency theory used to explain the nature of exploitation of the periphery by the core through trading relationships, in particular the undervaluing of peripheral products compared to core products
Uruguay Round – the decade-long series of negotiations associated with the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade that ended with the establishment of the World Trade Organization in 1995
Vicious circle of underdevelopment – a negative multiplier effect from lack of integrated development
Virtuous circle of development – a positive multiplier effect of integrated development
Washington Consensus – a collective term used to suggest that international financial institutions such as the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization have a unified underlying ideological position that promoted neoliberalism
World-Systems Analysis – a perspective closely associated with dependency theory that examines the history of the global economy from a holistic perspective focusing on the shifting power relations within an evolving international division of labour