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OpportunitiesA Development Studies Reading ListWhat books do students of development read? A small and somewhat arbitrary list, to be updated. Amartya Sen. Development as Freedom . 1999. Dietrich Rueschemeyer, Evelyn Huber and John Stephens. Capitalist Development and Democracy . 1992. John Harriss. Depoliticizing Development . 2002. Peter Evans. Embedded Autonomy: States and Industrial Transformation . 1999. Arturo Escobar. Encountering Development: the making and unmaking of the Third World . 1995. James Ferguson. The Anti-politics Machine: "Development," Depoliticization, and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho . 1994. Nancy Scheper-Hughes. Death without Weeping: the Violence of Everyday Life in Brazil . 1992. James Scott. Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance . 1985. James Scott. Seeing Like a State: how certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed . 1998. Mahmood Mamdani. Citizen and Subject: decentralized despotism and the legacy of late colonialism . 1997. Barrington Moore . Social origins of dictatorship and democracy: lord and peasant in the making of the modern world. 1967. Joel Migdal. Strong Societies and Weak States : state-society relations and state capabilities in the Third World . 1988. Karl Polanyi. The Great Transformation. 1944. What happens when markets are not restrained by social institutions? Atul Kohli. The state and poverty in India : the politics of reform . 1987. Fernando Henrique Cardoso and F. Enzo. Development and Dependency in Latin America . 1979. Albert Hirschman. Getting ahead collectively: grassroots experiences in Latin America . 1984. Joseph Stiglitz. Globalization and its Discontents . 2002.
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