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Rural Development
Except-Africa : Remaking Development, Rethinking Power by Emery Roe — book cover

Except-Africa : Remaking Development, Rethinking Power

by Emery Roe
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Overview

It is a commonplace that the problems of African rural development are becoming increasingly complex—that is, they have grown more numerous, interrelated, and varied. This complexity has generated a multitude of development scenarios. Such scenarios encourage decision making along rigid and narrow patterns that ignore the diversity of local situations and national cultures. Among these is the doomsday scenario, applied to every nation on the continent, best captured in the phrase "Everything worksàexcept in Africa." Emery Roe argues that crisis scenarios generated by an expert (usually non-African) elite are self-serving and counterproductive. Despite this, they go largely unchallenged, even when they fail to explain or predict. Except-Africa takes up the challenge of devising development scenarios that do justice to the continent's variegated reality.

The book begins by defining what the author means by a development narrative. The subsequent chapters provide alternate scenarios to such dominant models. Chapter 2 sketches four counter-narratives to the tragedy of the common argument, while chapter 3 constructs the most innovative challenge to conventional ways of thinking about Sub-Saharan pastoralism in decades. Chapter 4 develops an alternative scenario of expatriate advising in Africa, while chapter 5 devises a counter-narrative to the all-too-common views about government budgeting in Nigeria, Kenya, and Ghana. Chapter 6 presents a case study and counter-narrative from Zimbabwe of a complex local government reform. The book concludes by moving beyond case material and specific situations to answer the most imperative question in African studies and rural development: What would a politics of complexity look like in Africa if complexity were seriously engaged? Contemporary African studies are dominated by narratives about power. Yet in African rural development, power interests are by no means always clear. Development issues are frequently contingent and provisional. Surviving the tangled fusion of narrative and reality requires a politics of complexity. Except-Africa will be an essential work in meeting that challenge.

About the Author, Emery Roe

Emery Roe runs the Center for Sustainable Resource Development at the University of California, Berkeley.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"Roe's approach to African development is highly original. Agree or disagree, his book is certain to make you think of the issues in a new way."—David K. Leonard, University of California, Berkeley

Booknews

Argues that crisis scenarios regarding African rural development, usually generated by non-Africans, are self-serving and counterproductive. Challenges these development narratives and provides alternate scenarios surrounding sub-Saharan pastoralism, expatriate advising, and government budgeting. Offers a case study on government reform in Zimbabwe, and asks what a politics of complexity would look like in Africa if complexity were seriously engaged. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
February 28, 1999
Publisher
Transaction Publishers
Pages
204
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781560003991

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