Fr. 76.00

Developing Minds - Psychology, Neoliberalism and Power

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Development policy makers and practitioners are becoming increasingly sophisticated in their ability to target 'development' interventions and the psychological domain is now a specific frontier of their interventional focus. This landmark study considers the problematic relationship between development and psychology, tracing the deployment of psychological knowledge in the production/reproduction of power relations within the context of neoliberal development policy and intervention. It examines knowledge production and implementation by actors of development policy such as the World Bank and the neo-colonial state - and ends by examining the proposition of a critical psychology for more emancipatory forms of development.

The role of psychology in development studies remains a relatively unexplored area, with limited scholarship available. This important book aims to fill that gap by using critical psychology perspectives to explore the focus of the psychological domain of agency in development interventions. It will be essential reading for students, researchers, and policy makers from fields including critical psychology, social psychology, development studies and anthropology.

List of contents

Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 2. Power and psychology 3. Genealogies of the psychologisation of development interventions 4. The psychologisation of contemporary development interventions 5. The State and implementing subjectivities 6. A place for psychology in development? 7. Conclusions. References

About the author

Elise Klein is a Lecturer of Development Studies at the School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne in Australia

Summary

An important and pioneering study that considers the problematic relationship between development and psychology, tracing the deployment of psychological knowledge in the production/reproduction of power relations within the context of development policy and intervention.

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