Doing development and writing culture: Exploring knowledge practices in international development and anthropology

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Abstract

This article explores the implications of different knowledge practices in anthropology and international development. Knowledge in development is not a straightforward matter of knowledge about context and devising actions. International development practice is knowledge explicitly constituted as a form of action. Anthropological knowledge claims to separate knowledge from action, first, by making knowledge about the past actions of others - representations - and, second, by representing its own knowledge as abstracted from its practice in the present. The absence of anthropological knowledge from development practice is not a matter of the relation between different kinds of knowledge which could be brought together, but is a product of the ontological basis of different practices. Copyright © 2009 SAGE Publications.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)396-417
Number of pages21
JournalAnthropological Theory
Volume9
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2009

Keywords

  • Anthropological theory
  • Community participation
  • International development
  • Knowledge working
  • Local government reform
  • Participatory knowledge
  • Tanzania

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