Global Development Institute Blog

Global Development Institute Blog

We’re the Global Development Institute at The University of Manchester: where critical thinking meets social justice.

New book on the politics of growth from ESID researchers

New book on the politics of growth from ESID researchers

We are pleased to announce that Deals and Development, a book resulting from Effective States and Inclusive Development research on the politics of growth, has been published.  You can also read an Open Access version of the book here.

The book is edited by three leading thinkers on the politics of economic development, Lant Pritchett,  Eric Werker and the GDI’s very own Kunal Sen. The book also featured chapters from GDI researchers; Sam Hickey, Pritish Behuria and Matthew Tyce. read more…

GDI Explains: Migrant or Refugee?

GDI Explains: Migrant or Refugee?

Global Development Institute explains brings together expert academics from across the Institute to explain key concepts in development studies.

Who is a refugee? How do you define words like ‘migrant’ and ‘asylum seeker’? Are these synonymous with ‘refugee’? As part of the Global Development Institute Explains series, Dr Tanja Müller presents ‘migrant or refugee’, and discusses the differences between these terms. The press, such as The Guardian, BBC and Al Jazeera, use such words for specific purposes, sometimes interchangeably and inconsistently. How are the distinctions made? How does the legal definition of ‘refugee’ for example diverge from how the term is used by media or understood by members of the public? Watch to find out.

Note:  This article gives the views of the author/academic featured and does not represent the views of the Global Development Institute as a whole.
The White Helmets: devastation, borders and humanity

The White Helmets: devastation, borders and humanity

By Caroline Boyd, Global Inequalities Campaign Manager 

Last night we hosted a free, public screening of The White Helmets at the Manchester Museum as part of the ESRC’s Festival of Social Sciences.

Around 60 members of the public attended the open event which also formed part of our ongoing commitment to public engagement around global inequalities – one of our five research beacons at The University of Manchester. read more…

Is sustainability a useful concept in development?

Is sustainability a useful concept in development?

Dr Daniele Malerba, researcher at the German Development Institute for the project, Implementing the Agenda 2030: Integrating Growth, Environment, Equality and Governance and Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Manchester

Like two people falling in love, Development is nowadays rarely seen without Sustainability. And the latter changed the life of the former. For example, the Millennium Development Goals have become the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), culminating in the idea that development needs to be sustainable. But despite its established relevance, Sustainability might not be accepted by some of Development’s friends, for reasons I will try to outline later. Some evidence of this tension was given at the 2017 Annual Development Studies Association conference, the theme of which was “Sustainability Interrogated: Societies, Growth, and Social Justice”. GDI asked the conference participants: “Is sustainability a useful concept in development?” Nearly half of the voters (46%) indicated sustainability is a complicated concept, more than the voters indicating it as a central focus (36%); the minority (18%) did not think sustainability is a useful concept in development. Why is a science-driven concept like sustainability not thought of as useful by everybody? Why do Development’s friends think that Sustainability will not make Development’s life better? read more…

Shrinking manufacturing employment is “bad news for developing countries”

Shrinking manufacturing employment is “bad news for developing countries”

Andy Sumner, Reader in International Development in the Department of International Development, King’s College London and director of the ESRC Global Poverty & Inequality Dynamics (GPID) Research Network and  Lukas Schlogl, Research Associate with the ESRC GPID Research Network at King’s College London.

What are the implications of premature deindustrialisation? What—if anything—is so special with manufacturing? How can we make sense of recent growth episodes in the developing world? What industrial and employment policies should be pursued?

The Global Development Institute at the University of Manchester and the ESRC Global Poverty & Inequality Dynamics Research Network co-hosted a PhD masterclass with Harvard’s Dani Rodrik to address these questions. read more…

“Can you say that again, but faster?” Research communications lessons from Instagram and storytelling

“Can you say that again, but faster?” Research communications lessons from Instagram and storytelling

Dr Judith Krauss, Lecturer in Environment, Climate Change and Development, Global Development Institute

As we at the Global Development Institute like a challenge, we decided to foray into several slightly unconventional research communications methods in the past month. As our experiments with Instagram and storytelling demonstrated, engagement with new channels will require adapting what you say and how you say it, but the why never changes.

The two media of our choice, Instagram and spoken storytelling, appear diametrically opposed. One is based on pictures and 15-second videos, very much a product of the 21st century. The other one is a time-honoured practice that is central to how we perceive the world and ourselves. Nevertheless, both start from the same premise: what is the story? What is the kernel of truth within pages and pages of research findings to be shared with a larger audience?

read more…

In Conversation: Prof David Hulme and Prof Dani Rodrik

In Conversation: Prof David Hulme and Prof Dani Rodrik

Be a fly on the wall as GDI’s Executive Director, Prof David Hulme, interviews Prof Dani Rodrik, Ford Foundation Professor of International Political Economy at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, about globalisation, inequality and trade, as well as the sociology of economists, how the decay of norms in liberal democracies might impact the rest of the world, what to be concerned about for India, and why China is always a surprise. They also discuss how Prof Rodrik’s research has led to an examination of populism, how populism differs in the developed and developing worlds, and how in most of the latter, populism is not “true” populism in its historical sense or definition.

read more…
Podcast: Uma Kothari on migration and development

Podcast: Uma Kothari on migration and development

In August 2017 Prof Uma Kothari, Global Development Institute, spoke at the EADI NORDIC 2017 conference on ‘Contesting Reconfigured Boundaries: Migration and Development’. The conference was a joint partnership between EADI (European Association of Development Research and Training Institutes), NFU (Norwegian Association of Development Research), the University of Bergen (UiB) and the Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI).

You can listen to the podcast below or on: Stitcher, iTunes, Soundcloud, Castbox, RSS, & tunein

Note:  This article gives the views of the author/academic featured and does not represent the views of the Global Development Institute as a whole.

GDI Lecture Series: economics of populism with Prof Dani Rodrik

GDI Lecture Series: economics of populism with Prof Dani Rodrik

On Thursday, 26 October, Prof Dani Rodrik of the Harvard Kennedy School delivered the Global Development Institute Annual Lecture as part of the GDI Lecture Series. The lecture was entitled the economics of populism.

You can watch the livestream below. You can also listen to the podcast below

read more…

The trouble with stubble: The politics of cleaning India’s air

The trouble with stubble: The politics of cleaning India’s air

Dr Pritish Behuria, Hallsworth Research Fellow, Global Development Institute

Farmer burning stubble Credit: Raschpal Singh and Hansa Singh

Farmer burning stubble
Credit: Raschpal Singh and Hansa Singh

Over the last few years, there has been increased public attention on the dangerously high levels of pollution in New Delhi and in other parts of India.  In 2014, a World Health Organization report found that New Delhi had the dirtiest atmosphere of 1,600 cities across the world. In November 2016, one CNN report claimed that New Delhi was the most polluted city in the world at that time. India’s Central Pollution Control Board found that air in other Indian cities (including Bhiwadi in Rajasthan, Kolkata and Agra) was even worse than the capital.

Much has been written about the sources of India’s pollution. In 1997, the Ministry of Environment published a white paper on pollution in Delhi (though very little action was taken). Two government reports highlighted key pollutants including the burning of coal, petrol, diesel, gas, biomass and waste and dust (road and windblown) – though other government studies arrived at different conclusions.  Dust generated through infrastructure projects in the capital and annual increases in the number of cars have also contributed to increase in carbon emissions, particularly through diesel cars and trucks. One report suggested the number of vehicles registered in Delhi increased from 2.3 million in 1975 to 4.2 million in 2004 and is estimated to be around 7.2 million as of 2016.

read more…