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Helping People Help Themselves: From the World Bank to an Alternative Philosophy of Development Assistance (Evolving Values for a Capitalist World) [Hardcover]

David Ellerman (Author), Albert O. Hirschman (Foreword)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 13, 2005 Evolving Values for a Capitalist World

David Ellerman relates a deep theoretical groundwork for a philosophy of development, while offering a descriptive, practical suggestion of how goals of development can be better set and met. Beginning with the assertion that development assistance agencies are inherently structured to provide help that is ultimately unhelpful by overriding or undercutting the capacity of people to help themselves, David Ellerman argues that the best strategy for development is a drastic reduction in development assistance. The locus of initiative can then shift from the would-be helpers to the doers (recipients) of development. Ellerman presents various methods for shifting initiative that are indirect, enabling and autonomy-respecting. Eight representative figures in the fields of education, community organization, economic development, psychotherapy and management theory including: Albert Hirschman, Paulo Freire, John Dewey, and Søren Kierkegaard demonstrate how the major themes of assisting autonomy among people are essentially the same.

David Ellerman is currently a Visiting Scholar in the Economics Department at the University of California at Riverside.



Product Details

  • Hardcover: 354 pages
  • Publisher: University of Michigan Press (April 13, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0472114654
  • ISBN-13: 978-0472114658
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,462,248 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Helping hand operating through a `Development Church'?, February 22, 2007
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Among many recent books on development assistance, this is a highly peculiar one. It does not discuss cross-country regressions (which are supposedly a sign of academic rigor) but it has many deep ideas illustrated by engaging and compelling examples.

`Helping people help themselves' has become a development motto bordering on a platitude. But how can you help people become self-sufficient? Major contribution of the book is formulation and unraveling of this fundamental conundrum of development assistance: paradox of supplying help for self-help, teaching another person to think things out for himself and the like.

The major novelty of the book is in chapters 3 and 4 where this conundrum is analyzed as parent-child, teacher-student, patient-doctor, manager-worker, all as examples of a general helper - doer relationship. If you thought that Soren Kiergaard's `passionate leap of faith', M. Gandhi' Satyagraha or Carl Rogers' non-directive therapy is a different world from development assistance, think again. Juxtaposition of major thinkers from various fields is compelling and does shed light on mundane conundrums of development assistance.

But the author is not only a renaissance thinker but he is also a `doing thinker' (an incorrect characterization from the point of view of the book, but I'll use it nonetheless to emphasize thinking informed by everyday reality): he spent ten years inside the World Bank. So he speaks with authority of one's own experience of how the Bank often provides `unhelpful help'. And not necessarily when it lends money but when it becomes `knowledge bank' as well. In the standard methodology of knowledge-based development assistance, it just knows relevant best practices and teaches and preaches them all over the world as a `global development church'.

Concluding part of the book asks the question `can the World Bank change?' and develops a proposal for change, a proposal which is so radical and demanding that the only answer is `no, the Bank can not change'. And this is the least satisfactory part of the book. Not because the author is wrong (he just as well can be right) but because the proposal for the Bank' change does not follow the thrust of the book itself. Following this thrust, the Bank would be viewed as yet another troubled country with its many (and unavoidable) structural limitations. The relevant question is whether one can encourage an autonomous change, a reform `inside-out' of this organization. This would have required a very close attention to heterogeneity of both the World Bank itself and its clients.

The Bank dealing, say, with Chile and the Bank dealing with neighboring Paraguay are literally two different organizations, although procedures, constraints and limitations are all the same (and it is a single country director which is responsible for both countries ), yet a demanding client (Chile) forces it to innovate and experiment, the way Paraguay is not. This is how internal heterogeneity of the organization (almost entirely absent, for instance at IMF) is being sustained. And as many countries say know `money we don't need and ideas we you don't have;, this internal diversity and heterogeneity is only bound to grow. So the question, at once humble and ambitious, is how the better performing (in the send of the book) segments of this extremely diverse and heterogeneous beast be expanded and given an opportunity to grow.

But that perhaps is a subject for the next book, to be written by `doing thinker' and `thinking doer' (a brutally pragmatic reformer yet with some capacity for self-reflection).
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An alternative philosophy on development, April 26, 2008
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Ellerman eloquently gets the root understanding of the issue underlining the failure in development approach. Having understood that most of development agencies and institutions in particular World Bank either override or undercut the beneficiaries intrinsic motives respectively by the social engineering and the benevolent charity, Ellerman reveals to us how we need to start right where the people are and make sure that they are truly motivated.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The World Bank, the leading multilateral development agency, begins its mission statement with a dedication to helping people help themselves, and Oxfam, a leading nongovernmental organization (NGO) working on development, states that its "main aim is to help people to help themselves." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
motivational foreground, powerful global agencies, elite development agencies, unhelpful help, opportunity cost doctrine, lease buyouts, major development agencies, facto property rights, parallel experimentation, pecuniary motivation, voucher investment funds, horizontal learning, learning paradox, cognitive version, benevolent aid, postsocialist countries, helping people help, client country, voucher privatization, agency chains, formal property rights
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
World Bank, One Best Way, John Dewey, Soviet Union, Big Bang, Carl Rogers, First World, Michael Polanyi, World War, Albert Hirschman, Herbert Simon, Jane Addams, Paulo Freire, Agency Training Network, Immanuel Kant, Jane Jacobs, Saul Alinsky, World Rank
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