Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Development Projects for a New Millennium

View through CrossRef
Economic matters entered a new phase of importance in the wake of the Cold War. Concerns within development-assistance efforts to the Third World have also shifted. The current macro-environment of development has been accompanied by a plethora of new concerns and methods, such as how to consider gender in development projects and how to develop participatory-centered projects. Yet no text has covered many of the new approaches and techniques related to development projects, including issues of participation, gender, and evaluation—until now. Hira and Parfitt bridge these serious gaps, drawing on their hands-on experience and teaching in the field. The end of the Cold War was supposed to bring a new era of peace prosperity, and development. However, the post-Cold War world has not led to any major improvements in development. In this book, Hira and Parfitt examine why 50 years of development have not led to the wiping out of poverty. In the first part of the book, they break down the political agendas behind development in the post-Cold War World, as well as the serious flaws in current development project management. In the remainder of the book they look carefully at a number of new initiatives that seek to correct these problems, examining carefully their promise for bringing about more tangible results. This book provides a thorough overview of the classic concerns and approaches of development project management, including clear explanations of predominant planning and evaluation practices. In addition, the book introduces the major new initiatives in development project management, including those regarding environmental sustainability, participation, gender, and the steps needed to create a real learning environment in development project planning. The result is a guide for the project manager and policymaker who want to know the implications of recent development ideas in terms of everyday practices, as well as for the student and interested citizen seeking to move beyond theory and critique to see how new practices can change the way that development projects are administered.
Title: Development Projects for a New Millennium
Description:
Economic matters entered a new phase of importance in the wake of the Cold War.
Concerns within development-assistance efforts to the Third World have also shifted.
The current macro-environment of development has been accompanied by a plethora of new concerns and methods, such as how to consider gender in development projects and how to develop participatory-centered projects.
Yet no text has covered many of the new approaches and techniques related to development projects, including issues of participation, gender, and evaluation—until now.
Hira and Parfitt bridge these serious gaps, drawing on their hands-on experience and teaching in the field.
The end of the Cold War was supposed to bring a new era of peace prosperity, and development.
However, the post-Cold War world has not led to any major improvements in development.
In this book, Hira and Parfitt examine why 50 years of development have not led to the wiping out of poverty.
In the first part of the book, they break down the political agendas behind development in the post-Cold War World, as well as the serious flaws in current development project management.
In the remainder of the book they look carefully at a number of new initiatives that seek to correct these problems, examining carefully their promise for bringing about more tangible results.
This book provides a thorough overview of the classic concerns and approaches of development project management, including clear explanations of predominant planning and evaluation practices.
In addition, the book introduces the major new initiatives in development project management, including those regarding environmental sustainability, participation, gender, and the steps needed to create a real learning environment in development project planning.
The result is a guide for the project manager and policymaker who want to know the implications of recent development ideas in terms of everyday practices, as well as for the student and interested citizen seeking to move beyond theory and critique to see how new practices can change the way that development projects are administered.

Related Results

Terrific Makerspace Projects
Terrific Makerspace Projects
Terrific Makerspace Projects: A Practical Guide for Librarians features fifteen customizable projects that were designed as projects created by librarians/makerspace facilitators, ...
The Manufactured Millennium
The Manufactured Millennium
The Puritans reconceptualized the millennium—their vision of peace in the world to come. As a religiously inspired end-of-the-world scenario, most political and legal historians se...
Metis : On the Surface
Metis : On the Surface
Metis : On the Surface is an exhibition of seven projects that range from installations to large urban restructuring proposals. The exhibition and the projects are by Metis, an ate...
Corporate Insolvency Laws in Abandoned Housing Projects : Issues and Prospects
Corporate Insolvency Laws in Abandoned Housing Projects : Issues and Prospects
This book discusses the provisions and legal principles under the Insolvency Law in Malaysia in face of the issue of abandoned housing projects and its rehabilitation. Apart from t...
International Project Finance
International Project Finance
Abstract The second edition of this new authority on project financing continues to provide guidance on the legal and practical issues relevant to international proj...
Writing Matters
Writing Matters
The epigraphy of 1st-millennium-BCE Italy has been studied for many years, but these studies have largely concentrated on the languages encoded in the inscriptions and their semant...
Sardis: A First Millennium B.C.E. Capital in Western Anatolia
Sardis: A First Millennium B.C.E. Capital in Western Anatolia
This article discusses findings from excavations at Sardis. Settlement at Sardis has existed for three-and-a-half millennia, from ca. 1500 BCE to the present; it may have existed e...
The World from 1000 BCE to 300 CE
The World from 1000 BCE to 300 CE
Abstract This book provides the first comprehensive history of Afro-Eurasia during the first millennium BCE and the beginning of the first millennium CE. The hist...

Back to Top