"Building on the work of Robert Chambers and Arturo Escobar, 'Communicating development with communities' is an empirically grounded critical reflection on how the development industry defines, imagines and constructs development at the implementation level. Unpacking the dominant syntax in the theory and practice of development, the book advocates a move towards relational and indigenous models of living that celebrate local ontologies, spirituality, economies of solidarity and community-ness. It investigates how subaltern voices are produced and appropriated, and how well-meaning experts can easily become oppressors. The book propounds a pedagogy of listening as a pathway that offers a space for interest groups to collaboratively curate meaningful development with and alongside communities." (Back cover)
Contents
I. DECONSTRUCTION
1 Spectacel of development, 3
2 "We came, we saw, he died": language of oppression, 32
II. RECONSTRUCTION AND RECOVERY
3 Capturing subaltern voices, 59
4 Living with people, 80
5 Encountering poverty in the 'Heart of Darkness', 109
6 Pedagogy of listening, 129