Intended as a core text for courses on development, world regional geography, and international political economy, this book presents tools for assessment of the nature and causes of global inequality and for critical examination of contemporary approaches to economic development. It examines such biophysical factors as climate, population, and natural resources, as well as historical, economic and political causes for disparities in development. The authors (geography, U. of Minnesota) express a concern that marginalized groups in the underdeveloped world be empowered to participate as equals in the analysis and work of development. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
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Drawing upon a full range of geographic knowledge, this engaging volume assesses the nature and causes of global inequality and critically examines contemporary approaches to economic development. Readers are encouraged to rethink their presuppositions about how development works as they gain a deeper understanding of the interacting dynamics of cultural practices and norms; biophysical factors such as climate, population, and natural resources; and economic and political processes--all of which have led to the present-day disparities between the first and third worlds. Enhanced by a wealth of original empirical data, diagrams, and maps, the book provides the broad-based tools students need to understand what local life is like in the less developed world, why conditions are the way they are, and how marginalized groups can be empowered to participate as equals in the analysis and work of development.
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