Announcement

South-South Development Cooperation 3.0? Changes in the Decade Ahead – SOAS, 29 January

24th Jan 2019

Emma Mawdsley (University of Cambridge)

South-South Development Cooperation 3.0? Changes in the Decade Ahead

Tuesday, 29 January, 5-7PM

Room: Djam Lecture Theatre (DLT), SOAS Main Building

 

The last decade or so has been a period of remarkable success for the actors, ideas and practices of South-South Cooperation. First, the number of Southern development partners has grown, and collectively they have significantly increased their development finances and programmes. Second, they have consolidated and defended the claim to doing development differently. Third, they have achieved recognition as essential partners within the international development community. This expansionary phase of South-South Cooperation followed five decades of Third Worldist, socialist and non-aligned development solidarities, achievements and setbacks, which were largely peripheral to the hegemonic institutions and ideologies of mainstream ‘international development’. In this paper I suggest that a third phase is now opening up in South-South Cooperation. Global factors are an important driver, particularly the end of the commodities super cycle and the contagion of the global financial crisis. So too are specific domestic issues, such as the risks presented by China’s debt, or Brazil’s economic and political crisis. Here though I focus on the successes of the last decade as important drivers of change currently unfolding in SSC agendas, narratives, modalities and institutions. I suggest that South-South Cooperation in the decade ahead will be characterised by a more pragmatic, outcome-oriented narrative framing than in previous phases; will experience greater difficulty in maintaining claims to non-interference; and will generally show less ideational and operational distinction from more ‘established’ donors in what is a more polycentric development field.

Emma Mawdsley is a Reader in the Geography Department, University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Newnham College. Her earlier work was focussed on regional and environmental politics in India; but for the last decade or so she has researched South-South Development Cooperation. Most recently, she has a growing interest in how the (so-called) ‘traditional’ donors are responding to the challenges and opportunities opening up in a turbulent ‘development’ landscape.

Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/2220374311615227/  

All welcome, no need to book but please do arrive early to be sure of a seat. Details of all events in the seminar series are provided below. The venue is wheelchair accessible. We look forward to seeing you there.

 

SOAS DEPARTMENT OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES & UCL, BLOOMSBURY AND EAST LONDON DOCTORAL TRAINING PARTNERSHIP

 

Seminar Series, Term 2, 2018-19

Tuesdays, 5-7PM

Room: Djam Lecture Theatre (DLT), SOAS Main Building

All welcome, no need to book

 

* 29 January *

Dr Emma Mawdsley (University of Cambridge)

South-South Development Cooperation 3.0? Changes in the Decade Ahead

Room: Djam Lecture Theatre (DLT), SOAS Main Building

 

* 5 February *

Dr Cédric Durand (University of Paris 13 and EHESS, France)

Fictitious Capital in the 21st Century

Room: Djam Lecture Theatre (DLT), SOAS Main Building

 

* 19 February *

Professor Étienne Balibar (University of Paris-Nanterre and Kingston University)

Exiles in the 21st Century: The New ‘Population Law’ of Absolute Capitalism

Room: Djam Lecture Theatre (DLT), SOAS Main Building

 

* 26 February *

Dr Marcus Taylor (Queen’s University, Canada)

Climate Change and the ‘New Green Revolution’ in India

Room: Djam Lecture Theatre (DLT), SOAS Main Building

 

* 5 March *

Professor Sylvia Walby (City, University of London)

Towards Zero Violence: Putting Gender into a Theory of Violence and Society

Room: Djam Lecture Theatre (DLT), SOAS Main Building

 

* 12 March *

Dr Mwangi wa Gĩthĩnji (University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA)

Agrarian Transition and Development in an Age of Globalised Inequality: Some Questions from Africa

Room: Djam Lecture Theatre (DLT), SOAS Main Building