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Full Description
This book investigates the uneasy coexistence of two current policy pathways within international development: to monetize aid and simultaneously to localize it.
The book explores these paths through the experiences of the development experts who are treading them, notably those who hail from aid recipient countries, and those who engage with for-profit instruments and institutions. It looks beyond non-profit NGOs, to the institutional realms of consulting firms, development finance institutions, and foreign state aid agencies involved in both for-and non-profit work. Based on over 100 interviews with development practitioners from Kenya, Tanzania and Sweden, as well as a range of other OECD-DAC countries, the book inquires into these professionals' everyday work, voice and authority, employment terms, career trajectories, moral convictions, and professional drivers. It synthesizes these empirical findings with a rich collection of internal aid documentation that rarely reaches public eye. The result is an incisive exploration of capitalism, poverty alleviation and global North-South inequalities within contemporary foreign aid. Addressing fundamental shifts within global development, this book will be an important read for researchers and students within qualitative social scientific studies of global development and international aid.
Written accessibly and to the point, the book also highlights possibilities for change which would be relevant for public and private sector development practitioners and policymakers.
Contents
1. Introduction 2. The 'Local Aid Worker 2.0': Monetizing Aid as in Diversifying Aid's Experts and Expertise? 3. Lesser Pay as in Less to Say? Aid Localization Revisited 4. Working in the Peripheries: On Access, Brokerage and Trust 5. Who's the 'Self' in Selfish? Profit-Making Developers' Institutional Interests and the Individuals Pursuing Them 6. Reciprocity in Aid Revisited: Profits and Risks in Development Finance Morality 7. The Sociality of Competition: Consultancy Contracting 8. Reorienting Scholarly Focus in 'Aidland' and its Implications 9. International Development Work's Agents and Beneficiaries



