Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1141Hits:19125863Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Article   Article
 

ID143524
Title ProperInternational development and the private sector
Other Title Informationthe ambiguities of “partnership”
LanguageENG
AuthorBlack, David ;  O’Bright, Ben
Summary / Abstract (Note)Historically, the relationship between the private sector and international development has been deeply ambivalent. For many, a vibrant private sector and competitive markets are the essential prerequisites of development. For many others, development is principally concerned with ameliorating the dislocation associated with capitalist profit seeking. In the last generation, this ambivalence has given way to an emphasis on the complementarities between the private sector and development. Yet skeptics have continued to criticize the form of development this trend has promoted. We review the historical conditions behind this trend; the controversies concerning transnational corporations and foreign direct investment; the rise of corporate social responsibility; the parallel rise of philanthrocapitalism; and the growth of micro-credit as a market-oriented vehicle for poverty alleviation and empowerment. When taken together, it is clear that private sector actors have become increasingly influential in the new landscape of development, yet their effects remain ambiguous.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal Vol. 71, No.1; Mar 2016: p.144-166
Journal SourceInternational Journal Vol: 71 No 1
Key WordsPartnership ;  International Development ;  Corporate Social Responsibility ;  Private Sector ;  Transnational Corporations ;  Micro-Credit ;  New Philanthropy


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text