Poverty Capital: Microfinance and the Making of Development

Author:   Ananya Roy (University of California, USA)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780415876728


Pages:   258
Publication Date:   03 March 2010
Replaced By:   9780415832731
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Poverty Capital: Microfinance and the Making of Development


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Author:   Ananya Roy (University of California, USA)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.660kg
ISBN:  

9780415876728


ISBN 10:   0415876729
Pages:   258
Publication Date:   03 March 2010
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Replaced By:   9780415832731
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

Poverty Capital is a must read for those interested in issues of poverty and inequality around the world. In taking an unflinching look at bottom billion capitalism, it shows how development actually works and how global markets are actually constructed. Although concerned with practices of microfinance in the global South, the book provides an analysis that is strikingly relevant for discussions of subprime markets, the financial crisis, and social justice here in America. -Robert Reich, Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley, USA Examining development as poverty management, Roy brings a unique focus to the contradictory relations of global microfinance. Her reflexive observations from local sites offer a provocative perspective on the 'democratization of development' via webs of knowledge spun in the World Bank's circuits of credit. -Philip McMichael, Development Sociology, Cornell University, USA Poverty Capital sends readers on a fascinating journey across Washington, D.C., Beirut, Cairo, and rural Bangladesh, with little choice but to rethink the whole project of development. Along the way, Roy crafts a brilliant study on the seductions of microfinance, the travelling circuits (and circus) of poverty capital, and the 'end of political economy'. A pure joy to read! -Michael Goldman, Sociology and Global Studies, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA Thoughtful, probing look at the economic development industry and its received wisdom. The popular microfinance movement is the book's motif. The author thinks like an academic and writes like a poet. -Jonathan Lewis, Huffington Post, USA ...a thought-provoking work for those interested in microfinance, poverty, and development economics. -J. E. Weaver, Drake University, Choice, December 2010


Poverty Capital is a must read for those interested in issues of poverty and inequality around the world. In taking an unflinching look at bottom billion capitalism, it shows how development actually works and how global markets are actually constructed. Although concerned with practices of microfinance in the global South, the book provides an analysis that is strikingly relevant for discussions of subprime markets, the financial crisis, and social justice here in America. -Robert Reich, Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley, USA Examining development as poverty management, Roy brings a unique focus to the contradictory relations of global microfinance. Her reflexive observations from local sites offer a provocative perspective on the 'democratization of development' via webs of knowledge spun in the World Bank's circuits of credit. -Philip McMichael, Development Sociology, Cornell University, USA Poverty Capital sends readers on a fascinating journey across Washington, D.C., Beirut, Cairo, and rural Bangladesh, with little choice but to rethink the whole project of development. Along the way, Roy crafts a brilliant study on the seductions of microfinance, the travelling circuits (and circus) of poverty capital, and the 'end of political economy'. A pure joy to read! -Michael Goldman, Sociology and Global Studies, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA Thoughtful, probing look at the economic development industry and its received wisdom. The popular microfinance movement is the book's motif. The author thinks like an academic and writes like a poet. -Jonathan Lewis, Huffington Post, USA ...a thought-provoking work for those interested in microfinance, poverty, and development economics. -J. E. Weaver, Drake University, Choice, December 2010


Poverty Capital is a must read for those interested in issues of poverty and inequality around the world. In taking an unflinching look at bottom billion capitalism, it shows how development actually works and how global markets are actually constructed.a Although concerned with practices of microfinance in the global South, the book provides an analysis that is strikingly relevant for discussions of subprime markets, the financial crisis, and social justice here in America. --Robert Reich, Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley Examining development as poverty management, Roy brings a unique focus to the contradictory relations of global microfinance. Her reflexive observations from local sites offer a provocative perspective on the 'democratization of development' via webs of knowledge spun in the World Bank's circuits of credit. --Philip McMichael, Development Sociology, Cornell University Poverty Capital sends readers on a fascinating journey across Washington, D.C., Beirut, Cairo, and rural Bangladesh, with little choice but to rethink the whole project of development. Along the way, Roy crafts a brilliant study on the seductions of microfinance, the travelling circuits (and circus) of poverty capital, and the 'end of political economy'. A pure joy to read! --Michael Goldman, Sociology and Global Studies, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities Thoughtful, probing look at the economic development industry and its received wisdom. The popular microfinance movement is the book's motif. The author thinks like an academic and writes like a poet. - Jonathan Lewis, Huffington Post


Poverty Capital is a must read for those interested in issues of poverty and inequality around the world. In taking an unflinching look at bottom billion capitalism, it shows how development actually works and how global markets are actually constructed. Although concerned with practices of microfinance in the global South, the book provides an analysis that is strikingly relevant for discussions of subprime markets, the financial crisis, and social justice here in America. -Robert Reich, Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley, USA Examining development as poverty management, Roy brings a unique focus to the contradictory relations of global microfinance. Her reflexive observations from local sites offer a provocative perspective on the 'democratization of development' via webs of knowledge spun in the World Bank's circuits of credit. -Philip McMichael, Development Sociology, Cornell University, USA Poverty Capital sends readers on a fascinating journey across Washington, D.C., Beirut, Cairo, and rural Bangladesh, with little choice but to rethink the whole project of development. Along the way, Roy crafts a brilliant study on the seductions of microfinance, the travelling circuits (and circus) of poverty capital, and the 'end of political economy'. A pure joy to read! -Michael Goldman, Sociology and Global Studies, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA Thoughtful, probing look at the economic development industry and its received wisdom. The popular microfinance movement is the book's motif. The author thinks like an academic and writes like a poet. -Jonathan Lewis, Huffington Post, USA ...a thought-provoking work for those interested in microfinance, poverty, and development economics. -J. E. Weaver, Drake University, Choice, December 2010 'Ananya Roy's Poverty Capital is a fascinating book: an invigorating study of the practices and discourses of microfinance .' '...an important and impressive book...It is an admirable overview of contemporary microfinance in all its proliferating diversity and considerable complexity.' -Brett Christophers, Uppsala University, in Environment and Planning D, vol 29 2011 'This book has many strengths. It is a well-conceived, timely, thorough study of a crucial issue; it is grounded by extensive fieldwork; and each chapter is full of nuanced observations on the histories and dynamics of microfinance institutions in Bangladesh, Afghanistan, the USA and elsewhere.' -Joel Wainwright, Ohio State University, in Environment and Planning D, vol 29 2011


Author Information

Ananya Roy is Professor of City and Regional Planning at the University of California, Berkeley. She is also the founding chair of a new undergraduate curriculum in Global Poverty and Practice. At Berkeley, Roy is the recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Award and Golden Apple Award for Outstanding Teaching, the highest teaching honors bestowed by the campus and its students. Roy's previous research has provided a close look at poverty and inequality in the cities of the global South.

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