Institutionalizing Inequality: Calculative Practices and Regimes of Inequality in International Development

This paper focuses on the institutionalization of inequality in relations between donors and NGOs in the international development sector. We argue that these relations operate within a neoliberal and competitive marketplace, which are necessarily unequal. Specifically, we focus on the apparently mu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Organization studies 2018-09, Vol.39 (9), p.1203-1226
Hauptverfasser: Hayes, Niall, Introna, Lucas D., Kelly, Paul
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creator Hayes, Niall
Introna, Lucas D.
Kelly, Paul
description This paper focuses on the institutionalization of inequality in relations between donors and NGOs in the international development sector. We argue that these relations operate within a neoliberal and competitive marketplace, which are necessarily unequal. Specifically, we focus on the apparently mundane practice of impact assessment, and consider how this is fundamental to understanding the performative enactment of institutional inequality. For our analysis we draw upon Miller and Rose’s work on governmentality and calculative practices. We develop our argument with reference to a case study of a donor driven impact assessment initiative being conducted in India. Specifically, we consider an impact assessment initiative that the donor has piloted with one of the NGOs they fund that seeks to improve the livelihoods of Indian farmers. We will argue that institutional inequality can be understood in the way the market as a social institution becomes enacted into mundane calculative practices. Calculative practices produce different kinds of knowledge and in so doing becomes a way in which subjects position themselves, or become positioned, as unequal.
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source SAGE Complete A-Z List; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
subjects Case studies
Donors
Economic development
Enactment
Evaluation
Farmers
Government
Governmentality
Inequality
Institutionalization
Neoliberalism
NGOs
Nongovernmental organizations
Organization studies
Social institutions
title Institutionalizing Inequality: Calculative Practices and Regimes of Inequality in International Development
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