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The Limits of Law and Development: Neoliberalism, Governance and Social Justice

Edited by: Sam Adelman, Abdul Paliwala

ISBN13: 9781138300354
Published: August 2020
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £135.00



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As resistance mounts to the still dominant but clearly bankrupt ideology of neoliberal globalisation and the poverty, inequality and corruption that characterises it, this book explores contemporary understandings of the relationship between law, development and social injustice. In a legal context, and primarily in relation to the now well-established field of ‘law and development’, the book’s central aim is to address the limits of the concept of development in all its forms: including post-development, alternative development and sustainable development. How should we understand development and social injustice in a period marked by financial, economic, political and ecological crises?

With contributors that include internationally renowned scholars in law and development, contemporary thinkers, and a new generation of academics working in the UK, South Asia, Africa and elsewhere, this book offers an important interrogation of why the concept of development is widely considered to be problematic, and the need to think beyond it.

Contents:
Part I: Rethinking Development and Social Justice
1. Beyond Development: New Imaginaries in Social Justice Sam Adelman and Abdul Paliwala
2. The Post-Development Agenda: Towards UN Sustainable Development Goals Upendra Baxi
3. Peoples’ Approaches to Social Justice: Tanzanian Land Rights Struggles Issa Shivji

Part II: Rethinking Law, Rights and Governance
4. ‘Unseen empires’: revolutionary legality and the end of development Peter Fitzpatrick
5. Human Rights: Southern Voices and Linguistic Injustice, William Twining,
6. Between Bandung and Doha: International Economic Law and Developing Countries Julio Faundez
7. Critical Theory and Practice in International Economic Law and the New Global Governance: The World and the Academy Sol Picciotto
8. Shifting Sands: Interrogating the Problematic Relationship between International Public Finance and International Financial Regulation Celine Tan,
9. International Law and Development: From Colonisation to Globalisation Radha D’Souza
10. Picturing Law, Politics and Justice: Leslee Udwin’s - India's Daughter Pratiksha Baxi

Part III: Law, Governance and Natural Resources
11. The ‘Right to Food’: Do Paradigms Undermine the Effectiveness of International Economic Law as a Tool for Development? Fiona Smith
12. The ‘Blood Sugar’ Value Chain as a Space for Critical Legal Analysis and Intervention Tomaso Ferrando
13. Community Development Agreements and the State’s Extractive Strategy in Mongolia: Participatory Governance or Governance Participation? Jennifer Lander