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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David SimonPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Zed Books Ltd Dimensions: Width: 13.40cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.380kg ISBN: 9781786995124ISBN 10: 1786995123 Pages: 344 Publication Date: 15 January 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsTo Hell and Back – For My Grandparents: Visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau, 2 March 1997 1. Introduction 2. European Childhoods, Nazi Rule and Escape 3. Surviving the War in the UK 4. Wartime Tracks in Europe and North America 5. Adult Escapees: Rebuilding Lives, (Re)shaping Careers 6. The Younger Generation: Postwar Education and Careers in Higher Education 7. The Younger Generation: International Agency Staff and Influential Consultants 8. Conclusions: Interpreting the Mosaic References Appendix: Biographical Sketches of People Excluded from the Study by Virtue of the Threshold ConditionsReviews`A fascinating and important book about the extraordinary contributions to global development by those who escaped the Holocaust. The lessons of these remarkable people are of deep and enduring value.' Nicholas Stern, LSE, and former Chief Economist for the World Bank `Tells the remarkable story of a group of holocaust survivors and escapees who were among the most influential thinkers in the nascent field of development studies. The book consecrates its author as one of the leading chroniclers of the history of development.' Arturo Escobar, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill `A genuinely insightful and moving book which shows just how profoundly the study of international development was shaped by the political and personal biographies of Jewish refugees from tyranny. A necessary and outstanding volume.' Stuart Corbridge, Durham University `A superb book exploring its subject with delicacy and depth. It adds to the social history of Holocaust escapees, and provides intriguing intellectual biographies of people who have had an enduring influence on development studies.' Christopher Cramer, SOAS University of London `A profoundly human account of the relationships between the personal lifeways of Holocaust escapees and their contributions to development thought. A fascinating book to be read with pain, pleasure, emotion and reflexivity.' Anthony Bebbington, Clark University `In honouring the remarkable though neglected contribution of Jewish refugees to the emergence of development studies, Simon has written a unique, moving and thought provoking book that will richly inform current critical thinking across the discipline.' Uma Kothari, University of Manchester `Reveals new insights into the ideas and lives of key development thinkers who escaped the holocaust. By revealing the often hidden context to their ideas Simon greatly enriches our understanding of the evolution of development studies.' Cristobal Kay, author of Latin American Theories of Development and Underdevelopment `Simon has undertaken a novel and also an unusual quest, one which sheds new light on the genius and creativity that the Nazis set out to destroy by the Holocaust.' Reinhart Koessler, Arnold-Bergstraesser-Institut, Freiburg `Simon pieces together a puzzle of history: Why were so many of the pioneer scholars in development escapees from the Nazis? In this fascinating book, he tells the story of how these scholars helped to define a field.' Jonathan Rigg, National University of Singapore A profoundly human account of the relationships between the personal lifeways of Holocaust escapees and their contributions to development thought. A fascinating book to be read with pain, pleasure, emotion and reflexivity. * Anthony Bebbington, Clark University * Tells the remarkable story of a group of holocaust survivors and escapees who were among the most influential thinkers in the nascent field of development studies. The book consecrates its author as one of the leading chroniclers of the history of development. * Arturo Escobar, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill * A superb book exploring its subject with delicacy and depth. It adds to the social history of Holocaust escapees, and provides intriguing intellectual biographies of people who have had an enduring influence on development studies. * Christopher Cramer, SOAS University of London * Reveals new insights into the ideas and lives of key development thinkers who escaped the holocaust. By revealing the often hidden context to their ideas Simon greatly enriches our understanding of the evolution of development studies. * Cristobal Kay, author of Latin American Theories of Development and Underdevelopment * Simon pieces together a puzzle of history: Why were so many of the pioneer scholars in development escapees from the Nazis? In this fascinating book, he tells the story of how these scholars helped to define a field. * Jonathan Rigg, National University of Singapore * A fascinating and important book about the extraordinary contributions to global development by those who escaped the Holocaust. The lessons of these remarkable people are of deep and enduring value. * Nicholas Stern, LSE, and former Chief Economist for the World Bank * Simon has undertaken a novel and also an unusual quest, one which sheds new light on the genius and creativity that the Nazis set out to destroy by the Holocaust. * Reinhart Koessler, Arnold-Bergstraesser-Institut, Freiburg * A genuinely insightful and moving book which shows just how profoundly the study of international development was shaped by the political and personal biographies of Jewish refugees from tyranny. A necessary and outstanding volume. * Stuart Corbridge, Durham University * In honouring the remarkable though neglected contribution of Jewish refugees to the emergence of development studies, Simon has written a unique, moving and thought provoking book that will richly inform current critical thinking across the discipline. * Uma Kothari, University of Manchester * `A fascinating and important book about the extraordinary contributions to global development by those who escaped the Holocaust. The lessons of these remarkable people are of deep and enduring value.' Nicholas Stern, LSE, and former Chief Economist for the World Bank `A profoundly human account of the relationships between the personal lifeways of Holocaust escapees and their contributions to development thought. A fascinating book to be read with pain, pleasure, emotion and reflexivity.' Anthony Bebbington, Clark University `In honouring the remarkable though neglected contribution of Jewish refugees to the emergence of development studies, Simon has written a unique, moving and thought provoking book that will richly inform current critical thinking across the discipline.' Uma Kothari, University of Manchester `Simon has undertaken a novel and also an unusual quest, one which sheds new light on the genius and creativity that the Nazis set out to destroy by the Holocaust.' Reinhart Koessler, Arnold-Bergstraesser-Institut, Freiburg `Reveals new insights into the ideas and lives of key development thinkers who escaped the holocaust. By revealing the often hidden context to their ideas Simon greatly enriches our understanding of the evolution of development studies.' Cristobal Kay, author of Latin American Theories of Development and Underdevelopment Author InformationDavid Simon is Director of Mistra Urban Futures, Gothenburg, and Professor of Development Geography at Royal Holloway, University of London. His previous books include Rethinking Sustainable Cities (2016) and the co-edited collection Fifty Key Thinkers on Development (2008). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |