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Article
Introduction to a symposium on development implementation: discipline, deception, and the relational work of development
Critical Policy Studies (2019)
  • Rebecca W Peters, Syracuse University
  • Jessica Mulligan
Abstract
This article introduces a symposium of three ethnographic papers on the relational work of policy implementation in the context of international development. Relational work is usually unrecognized in the policy process, creating misunderstandings and barriers as well as promoting improvisation and innovation. Implementers in the cases presented – democracy promotion in Angola, rural livelihoods in India, and birth registration in Tanzania – use interpretive labor and sometimes deceit in order to carry out the creative and interpersonal work of development. Implementers often further local development goals, but ignore and subvert the disciplinary aims of development governance that seek to remake their economic, political, and social habits. These articles identify that it is the social work of forging and managing interpersonal relationships that allows development workers and intended beneficiaries to make policy.
Keywords
  • Development,
  • ethnography,
  • policy implementation,
  • anthropology of policy
Publication Date
August 28, 2019
DOI
10.1080/19460171.2019.1657923
Citation Information
Rebecca W Peters and Jessica Mulligan. "Introduction to a symposium on development implementation: discipline, deception, and the relational work of development" Critical Policy Studies Vol. 13 Iss. 4 (2019) p. 370 - 378 ISSN: 1946-0171
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jessica_mulligan/32/