Related Publications
Birds in Our Lives
Ashish Kothari
Published by Universities Press (India) Private
Limited
pp 292, Rs.550/-
UNDeePer in the Techno-Corporate Mire
Edited by Smitu Kothari and Michelle Chawla, 2002
This compilation of essays provides a glimpse of the widespread discomfort with the Report prepared by the Human Development Report Office (HDR) of the United Nations Development Programme’s (UNDP) in 2001 – referred to as HDR 2001. The contention of this Report is that the Third World Countries need to urgently embrace the dramatic advances in Bio and Information Technology if they want to pull themselves out of the morass of poverty and inequity. A thorough reading of the report confirms a contrary conclusion: that this prescription will allow deeper penetration of Transnational Corporations into the fabric of our societies and create further inequities and dependencies. This collection of voices from South Asia opposing the approach HRD espouses, mirrors similar voices from Africa, Latin America, other parts of Asia and wherever else disadvantaged communities have been victims of mal-development, exploitation and exclusion of the poor by the rich. It attempts to counter this charge and to assert that there is indeed significant opposition to the approach HRD espouses.
68 pages, Colour Cover, Rs.60, USD 6
This compilation of essays provides a glimpse of the widespread discomfort with the Report prepared by the Human Development Report Office (HDR) of the United Nations Development Programme’s (UNDP) in 2001 – referred to as HDR 2001. The contention of this Report is that the Third World Countries need to urgently embrace the dramatic advances in Bio and Information Technology if they want to pull themselves out of the morass of poverty and inequity. A thorough reading of the report confirms a contrary conclusion: that this prescription will allow deeper penetration of Transnational Corporations into the fabric of our societies and create further inequities and dependencies. This collection of voices from South Asia opposing the approach HRD espouses, mirrors similar voices from Africa, Latin America, other parts of Asia and wherever else disadvantaged communities have been victims of mal-development, exploitation and exclusion of the poor by the rich. It attempts to counter this charge and to assert that there is indeed significant opposition to the approach HRD espouses.
68 pages, Colour Cover, Rs.60, USD 6