Global Development Goals: The Folly of Technocratic Pretensions
This article argues that, although effective strategic choices for achieving global development goals need to be based on assessments of the costs and benefits of alternative approaches, existing methods of arriving at such assessments are highly unreliable, in particular deriving from implausible and restrictive assumptions and often depending on data of poor quality, and on the pretence that the future can be adequately known. Such weaknesses can be mitigated, but not easily overcome, without abandoning deeply held technocratic presumptions. Copyright 2008 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Year of publication: |
2008
|
---|---|
Authors: | Reddy, Sanjay ; Heuty, Antoine |
Published in: |
Development Policy Review. - Overseas Development Institute. - Vol. 26.2008, 1, p. 5-28
|
Publisher: |
Overseas Development Institute |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Peer and Partner Review: A Practical Approach to Achieving the Millennium Development Goals
Reddy, Sanjay, (2005)
-
NOTES - Estimating Costs of Achieving Global Goals
Reddy, Sanjay, (2008)
-
Global Development Goals: The Folly of Technocratic Pretensions
Reddy, Sanjay, (2008)
- More ...