Syllabus

Chant, S. Re-thinking the “Feminization of poverty” in relation to aggregate Gender Indices. Journal of human development. Vol 7, no. 2. 201-220. 20 pages.

Eichengreen, Barry and Ngaire Woods. 2016. ‘The IMF's Unmet Challenges,’ Journal of Economic Perspectives, 30(1): 29-52. 22 pages.

Fine, B & E. Van Wayenberge. 2013. A Paradigm Shift that Never Was: Justin Lin’s New Structural Economics. Competition and Change, 17 (4): 355-71.

Ghosh, Jayati. 2017. ‘Trumponomics and the developing world,’ Real World Economics Review (79, pt. 2): 29-34. 5 pages

Hesselberg, J. 2010. Becoming poor in Ghana. University of Oslo. 11 pages.

Hesselberg, J & A. Iversen 2009. A historical and gendered perspective on HIV/AIDS in Botswana. University of Oslo. 34 pages.

Hancock, K. J. 2015. The expanding horizon of renewable energy in sub-Saharan Africa: Leading research in the social sciences. Energy Research & Social Science 5, 1-8. 8 pages.

Holmen, H. 2015. Is land grabbing always what it is supposed to be? Large-scale land investments in sub-Saharan Africa. Development Policy Review, 2015, 1-22. 22 pages.

Jensen, K B. 2015a. Working and living in the private home spaces of the employer: Bangladesh Female child domestic worker’s limited agency. 1-16. 16 pages.

Jensen, K B. 2015b. Learning skills, building social capital, and getting education: Actual and potential advantages of child domestic work in Bangladesh. Geographies of children and young people, Springer Singapore. Vol. 10. 22 pages.

Jensen, K B. 2015c. Child slavery and the fish processing industry in Bangladesh.  Focus on Geography. Vol 56 – 2, 54-65. 22 pages.

Koch, S. 2015. From Poverty Reduction to Mutual Interest? The Debate on Differentiation in EU  Development Policy. Development Policy Review, 2015, 1-24. 24 pages.

Larsen, S. 2012. Foreign land acquisitions in Tanzania. Global Ideology,  local perspectives. Master Thesis in Human Geography. University of Oslo. 85 pages.

Lin, Justin and Ha-Joon Chang. 2009. ‘Should Industrial Policy in Developing Countries Conform to Comparative Advantage or Defy it? A Debate Between Justin Lin and Ha-Joon Chang,’ in Development Policy Review, 2009, 27 (5): 483-502. 19 pages.

McKay, J. Ch. 2: Reassessing Development Theory: Modernization and Beyond, in Kingsbury, D et al. Key Issues in Development 2004, 45-66. 22 pages.

Milanovic, Branko. 2016. ‘Why the Global 1% and the Asian Middle Class Have Gained the Most from Globalization,’ Harvard Business Review May 13th 2016.  3 pages.

Palley, T. 2017. Trump’s International Political Economy: Neocon Neoliberalism Camoflaged with Andi-Globalization Circus. PERI Working Paper 432. 11 pages.

Rodrik, Dani. 2006. ‘Goodbye Washington consensus, hello Washington confusion: a review of the World Bank’s Economic growth in the 1990s: Learning from a decade of reform,’ Journal of Economic Literature. 26 pages.

Shaikh, Anwar (2006),‘Globalization and the Myth of Free Trade,’ in Shaikh, Anwar (ed) Globalization and the Myths of Free Trade: History, Theory, and Empirical Evidence. 17 pages.

Taylor, Ian. 2004. ‘Hegemony, neoliberal ‘good governance’ and the International Monetary Fund: a Gramscian perspective,’ in Bøas, Morten and Desmond McNeill (eds.), Global Institutions and Development, 124-136. 12 pages.

Ulsrud, K. 2011. The solar transitions research on solar mini-grids in India: Learning from local cases of innovative socio-technical systems. Energy for Sustainable Development, vol 15 issue 3, 293-303. 11 pages.

UNCTAD. 2015. The least developed countries report 2015. Transforming rural economies. Geneva. 163 pages.

UNDP. 2015. Human development report. Work for human development. New York 272 pages.

Wade, Robert H. 2017. ‘Is Trump wrong on trade? A partial defense based on production and employment,’  Real World Economics Review (79, pt. 2): 43-63. 20 pages

World Bank. 2016. Development goals in an era of demographic change. Global Monitoring Report 2015/2016. Washington, DC. 283 pages.

 

Total 1206 pages.

 

Published May 10, 2017 12:36 PM - Last modified May 10, 2017 12:36 PM