106 research outputs found

    Liberalism and the politics of Occupy Wall Street

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    Five reasons to think twice about the UN’s sustainable development goals

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    As part of the Africa at LSE and South Asia at LSE cross-blog series on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, LSE’s Jason Hickel critiques the new Sustainable Development Goals. He argues that the goals due to be signed at the UN Summit this week are not only a missed opportunity, but actively dangerous because they lock the global development agenda around a failing economic model

    Book review: the crises of microcredit edited by Isabelle Guérin, Marc Labie and Jean-Michel Servet

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    Do microfinance initiatives offer a panacea for poverty? In The Crises of Microcredit, editors Isabelle Guérin, Marc Labie and Jean-Michel Servet present a set of essays that examines the emergent problems in the microfinance sector. While the book will be of use to those wanting to understand how an apparent miracle cure now seems shrouded in crisis, Jason Hickel argues that the book does not fully explore the structural issues that render microcredit a fundamentally flawed means of enabling development and solving global poverty

    Book review: the new extractivism: a post-neoliberal development model or imperialism of the twenty-first century? edited by Henry Veltmeyer and James Petras

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    The New Extractivism aims to address a fundamental dilemma faced by governments in Latin America: to pursue, or not, a development strategy based on resource extraction in the face of immense social and environmental costs, not to mention mass resistance from the people negatively affected by it. This book offers a persuasive antidote to the misplaced optimism about Latin America that many progressives have bought into, writes Jason Hickel

    Flipping the Corruption Myth

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    LSE’s Jason Hickel argues that corruption is far from the sole cause of poverty in the Global South

    Exposing the great ‘poverty reduction’ lie

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    The UN claims that its Millennium Development Campaign has reduced poverty globally. This assertion is far from true, writes Jason Hickel

    Book review: Poverty and the millennium development goals: acritical look forward edited by Alberto Cimadamore, GabrieleKoehler and Thomas Pogge

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    In 2015, The UN Millennium Development Goals reached their deadline – but what has been their legacy? Poverty and the Millennium Development Goals, edited by Alberto Cimadamore, Gabriele Koehler and Thomas Pogge, brings together scholars to interrogate their success in reducing global poverty. Jason Hickel welcomes this as a refreshing and vital critical perspective on the MDGs and recommends it to readers looking for an alternative paradigm for development

    Book review: how soon is now? From personal initiation to global transformation by Daniel Pinchbeck

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    In How Soon is Now? From Personal Initiation to Global Transformation, Daniel Pinchbeck presents his argument for the need for urgent transformations at both the personal and global scale if we are to tackle the ‘hard problems’ posed by climate change and other pressing environmental issues. While querying aspects of Pinchbeck’s argument and the transition movement more broadly, Jason Hickel nonetheless welcomes this as a brave and necessary book from an important contemporary thinker

    The anti-colonial politics of degrowth

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    A Letter to Steven Pinker (and Bill Gates, for that matter) About Global Poverty

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    A response to a letter regarding claims made in the Guardian about the global poverty narrative and printed with permission from Jason Hickel’s blog from Feb. 9, 2019
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