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What’s Hot and What’s Not? Changes in development thinking in the last 5 years Duncan Green IDS 2013

What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

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PowerPoint presentation from Duncan Green's (Senior Strategic Adviser at Oxfam GB) Sussex Development Lecture on 6 March 2013

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Page 1: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

What’s Hot and What’s Not?Changes in development thinking in

the last 5 years

Duncan GreenIDS

2013

Page 2: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?
Page 3: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

Global Financial Crisis

Page 4: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

Global Food Price Spikes

Page 5: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

The Arab Spring

Page 6: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

Climate Chaos

Page 7: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

New Thinking on Development: Where do Poor People live?

Page 8: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

Women for Development v Development for Women

Page 9: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

The nature of poverty: volatility, well-being, chronic v

churning

Page 10: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

Complex Systems v causal chains

Page 11: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

Multipolar world – who’s in charge?

Page 12: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

Helping Others v Do No Harm

Make Poverty History (2005)• Aid• Debt• Trade

IF (2013)• Aid• Tax Loopholes• Land Grabs• Transparency

Page 13: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

Cinderella Issues

Page 14: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

People on the move: global

Page 15: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

People on the move: Urban

Page 16: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

Waves of New Technology

Page 17: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

So what did FP2P get right/wrong?• How Change Happens as key area of study• Inequality and redistribution (banks,

resources)• Active citizens and effective states, but– Market power needs to be in there

• ‘The national’ > global, but......– Climate change/boundaries a game changer (and

a present not future threat)– Financial system remains a huge threat

Page 18: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

“In telling us what can be achieved byordinary people through organised

action, this book generates hope even as it enhances understanding of what

is involved in the removal of poverty.”Amartya Sen

Page 19: What's hot and what's not: How has development thinking changed in the last five years?

But blogging is more fun....