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Withdrawn Module: In Sickness and in Wealth: International Development and the Making of the Third World (HI162)

third_world.jpgPlease note that this module was available
from 2003 to 2007, but has since been
withdrawn and is no longer available.


Tutor: Dr Sarah Hodges

This undergraduate first-year and second-year option module complements the first-year History core course by providing the opportunity for students to study in greater depth the processes by which British and French colonies (primarily in Africa and Asia) were remade into discrete units of international economic management over the course of the twentieth century.

In the twentieth century, 'development' - its institutions, practices and ideas - accounted for some of the most ambitious experiments in social engineering that the world has ever witnessed. In this course we will investigate key experiments in development - from attempts to transform farming and end world hunger via the 'Green Revolution' to attempts to transform sex and end world hunger via population control - and ask: To what degree was development in the twentieth century the emancipatory product of a post-war and postcolonial world order, and to what degree was it merely the heir to colonialism?

In the first term, we will focus on the colonial history of development in the first half of the twentieth century, particularly in French and British colonies in Asia and Africa. We will investigate the official world of the management and design of colonial development funds from London and Paris, as well as study key areas of colonial development initiatives including: farming and environmental/resource management, health and medicine, and urban housing. We will conclude mid-century with a look at nationalist critiques of colonial economic development.

In the second term, we will address how World War Two and decolonisation reformulated the terrain on which development schemes could be imagined and implemented. We will investigate the key role played by the Marshall Plan as a template for international development in the second half of the twentieth century, the relationship between international development and Cold War politics, and we will address the formation and transformation of key development institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. We will continue to look at specific development campaigns such as the Green Revolution, mega-dams and population control and ask questions regarding their similarities with their antecedents within colonial development. Additionally, we will investigate Soviet models of development as they played into, and often set, an agenda for international development. Finally, we will investigate how ideas of development informed relationships between late-and post-colonial states and their subjects.