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JONES, BEN (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   106677


Instrumental, narrow, normative: reviewing recent work on religion and development / Jones, Ben; Petersen, Juul   Journal Article
Jones, Ben Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract There is a growing body of research on religion and development, primarily from development scholars and practitioners. In many ways this represents a new departure for development studies, which has been largely uninterested in religion in the past. This growing interest can be explained through a number of inter-linking factors, including the persistence of religion in much of the world, and the sense that existing approaches to development have been ineffective. In reviewing the literature we put forward three broad criticisms. First, it is instrumental in its approach-it is interested in understanding how religion can be used to do development 'better'. Second, it has a narrow focus on faith-based organisations, which is in many ways a consequence of the need to understand religion instrumentally. Third, it is based on normative assumptions in terms of how both religion and development are conceptualised: religion is understood to be apart from 'mainstream' development, while development is defined as that thing that development agencies do. In making sense of these criticisms we emphasise the extent to which the recent interest in religion and development has come from donors and development agencies. We found little evidence of academic research on religion and development prefiguring the interest of the World Bank or bilateral agencies. The article concludes with some suggestions of how to move forward.
Key Words Development  Religion  Narrow 
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2
ID:   087915


No choice but change for Britain's armed forces / Campbell , nzies; Jones, Ben   Journal Article
Jones, Ben Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract The government is trading on the 'can do' attitude of the British armed forces in the face of inadequate equipment and service provision, and growing pressure on public expenditure. The only way forward is for the UK to take the lead in developing European defence capability.
Key Words Change  New Direction  Britain's Armed Forces  No Choice 
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