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Arturo Escobar

    Arturo Escobar is een antropoloog wiens werk zich verdiept in theorieën over zijn en het lichaam, evenals theorieën over maatschappij en politiek. Zijn schrijven wordt gekenmerkt door een diepe interesse in hoe lichamen en zijn interageren met politieke en sociale processen. Escobar onderzoekt maatschappelijke verandering door een kritische analyse van beleid en sociale bewegingen.

    Territorios de diferencia
    Encountering Development
    Designs for the Pluriverse
    • Arturo Escobar presents a new vision of design theory by arguing for the creation of what he calls autonomous design-a design practice aimed at channeling design's world-making capacity toward ways of being and doing that are deeply attuned to justice and the Earth.

      Designs for the Pluriverse
      4,5
    • Encountering Development

      The Making and Unmaking of the Third World

      How did the industrialized nations of North America and Europe come to be seen as the appropriate models for post-World War II societies in Asia, Africa, and Latin America? How did the postwar discourse on development actually create the so-called Third World? And what will happen when development ideology collapses? To answer these questions, Arturo Escobar shows how development policies became mechanisms of control that were just as pervasive and effective as their colonial counterparts. The development apparatus generated categories powerful enough to shape the thinking even of its occasional critics while poverty and hunger became widespread. Development was not even partially deconstructed until the 1980s, when new tools for analyzing the representation of social reality were applied to specific Third World cases. Here Escobar deploys these new techniques in a provocative analysis of development discourse and practice in general, concluding with a discussion of alternative visions for a postdevelopment era.Escobar emphasizes the role of economists in development discourse--his case study of Colombia demonstrates that the economization of food resulted in ambitious plans, and more hunger. To depict the production of knowledge and power in other development fields, the author shows how peasants, women, and nature became objects of knowledge and targets of power under the gaze of experts.

      Encountering Development
      4,1