Culture as a Determinant for Development: Why External Planning May Fail
This paper questions the absence of culture from development theory and seeks to problematize the expectation that any theory can be generalized over diverse cultures without the inherent provision for significant adaptation from existing cultural practise. It locates the source of this gap between theory and practise as arising from the predominant influence of sociological theory which,conflates development with Western modernity, requiring the overthrow of tradition and cultural norms in advance of progress. It suggests that development theorists must distance themselves from other schools of social thought and must immerse themselves in original fieldwork in order to provide a more pragmatic understanding of the direction of sustainable development. It favours micro-development over macro-development. While this paper in large measure comprises textual research, it also includes data collected through direct field research conducted in Rajasthan, India. Informants for this research include Indian scholars and academics, representatives of NGOs operating in India as well as residents of local villages.
Keywords: Culture, Local, Macro-Development, Micro-Development, Praxis, Theory, Tradition
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C.W. James Butler
Doctoral Student, Culture and Society |
Ref: S09P0034