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Introducing International Development Management

Development is a phenomenon with a pedigree stretching back over 200 years, rather than the period since the Second World War and the beginnings of decolonisation as is generally conceived. This unit, which is broken down into four main sections, focuses on different elements of development. Section 2 examines the context and practice of development and different conceptualisations of poverty. The next section examines the actors and structures of development, and specifically the ‘management’ of development processes. The institutions of development are the focus of Section 4, with a focus on inter-organisational relations and negotiation of development actors. The final section focuses on development in difficult contexts – specifically development interventions, such as peacebuilding, in the context of violent conflict.

Course Curriculum

Introduction to Introducing international development management 00:00:00
1 Overview of international development
1.1 Development, development management – and you 00:00:00
1.2 Different Contexts
1.2.1 Different contexts 00:00:00
1.2.2 Different conceptualisations 00:00:00
1.2.3 Different actors 00:00:00
1.3 Managing development: professional and personal challenges
1.3.1 Acting in public arenas 00:00:00
1.3.2 Being inclusive 00:00:00
1.3.3 Making a case 00:00:00
1.4 Developing institutions: rules and relationships
1.4.1 Framing development 00:00:00
1.4.2 Building relationships 00:00:00
1.4.3 Negotiating development 00:00:00
1.5 Engaging with conflict: war and peace 00:00:00
1.5.1 Civil war threatens development 00:00:00
1.5.2 Challenging conventional wisdom on the causes of civil war 00:00:00
1.5.3 Peacebuilding as a process 00:00:00
1.6 Over to you 00:00:00
2 Development context and practice
2.1 Introduction 00:00:00
2.2 Poverty and inequality 00:00:00
2.3 Globalisation 00:00:00
2.4 The practice of development 00:00:00
2.5 Public action and development policy 00:00:00
2.6 Public action as steering development 00:00:00
2.7 Public action as enabling immanent development 00:00:00
2.8 Public action as contesting development 00:00:00
2.9 Section summary and conclusion 00:00:00
3 Managing Development
3.1 Introduction 00:00:00
3.2 Managing development: professional and personal challenge 00:00:00
3.3 Development management in the twenty-first century 00:00:00
3.4 Managing development: tools and approaches 00:00:00
3.5 Tools and approaches: investigating 00:00:00
3.6 Tools and approaches: understanding 00:00:00
3.7 Tools and approaches: being inclusive 00:00:00
3.8 The development manager as advocate: making a case 00:00:00
3.9 The development manager as advocate: making a case against 00:00:00
4 Institutions of development
4.1 Introduction 00:00:00
4.2 Understanding institutions and institutional development 00:00:00
4.3 Why are institutions and institutional development important for development? 00:00:00
4.4 Why do inter-organisational relations matter? 00:00:00
4.5 The changing relationships between state, market and civil society 00:00:00
4.5.1 Bringing the state back in 00:00:00
4.5.2 Building institutions for markets 00:00:00
4.5.3 Understanding civil society 00:00:00
4.6 Making institutional development happen 00:00:00
4.7 Perspective and power in making institutional development happen 00:00:00
5 Development in difficult contexts
5.1 Introduction 00:00:00
5.2 Perceptions 00:00:00
5.3 Decision making 00:00:00
5.4 Choices and principles – sanctions and Sierra Leone 00:00:00
5.4.1 ‘The sanctions debate’ 00:00:00
5.5 Negotiation 00:00:00
Conclusion 00:00:00

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