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Zed Books

Zed Books

RADICAL PUBLISHER SINCE 1976 - 30 YEARS PROVOKING IDEAS
  • London, UK
  • member since February 10 2009

Reviews

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Displaying 1-10 of 89 reviews
  • by Bjorn Hettne
    • Rated 5 stars

    This scholarly yet accessible and clearly-written book should be read by everyone with an interest in current global issues. Rescuing critical development thinking from the 'cul de sac' of the post-developmentalists, Hettne argues that a concept of global development remains central to the rethinking and restucturing of international relationships if we are to engage fully with the demands of an emerging multipolar world order. - David Lewis, London School of Economics and Political Science

    'Thinking about Development is a clear and concise introduction to the idea of development from one of the most established scholars in the field. Looking at past and present Hettne forces us to think about possible future scenarios. This is essential reading for those new to development thinking and practice as well as a great refresher for those who feel disconnected from the bigger picture that global development represents.' - Jelke Boesten, School of Politics and International Studies, University of Leeds

    'Bjorne Hettne's timely and compelling book puts development into a much needed historical perspective with a forceful and convincing interpretation of development in the past and in today's global era. A must read for all development scholars and practitioners who take seriously the need to bring the insights of development studies to what Hettne rightly argues is required today - new global social theory.' - Wendy Harcourt Editor of 'Development'

    Zed Books wrote this review Wednesday, October 7 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • by Bronwen Manby
    • Rated 5 stars

    'This is a sharp, concise and convincing analysis of the ruthless manipulation of the idea of citizenship by Africa’s rulers. Manby brilliantly exposes the large scale legalised discrimination and disenfranchisement which underlie many of today’s political conflicts in Africa. A must read for policymakers and any serious student of African politics.' - Tom Porteous, author of 'Britain in Africa'

    'Ever more people in Africa are excluded from citizenship through a complex intertwinement of colonial categorizations and post-colonial political tricks, coupled with mounting xenophobia. There are many reasons why a person can be re-classified as a stranger, but loss of statehood always has dire consequences. Bronwen Manby and her team offer a deeper understanding of the complex backgrounds and striking variations involved, vividly evoking the plights of millions who have to do without any state protection. A most convincing testimony to the urgency of this issue.' - Peter Geschiere, author of ' Perils of Belonging: Autochthony, Citizenship and Exclusion in Africa and Europe'

    'Bronwen Manby has done a tremendous service by writing the most comprehensive survey of citizenship in Africa. Based, in part, on a large survey of laws and practices sponsored by the Open Society Institute, Struggles for Citizenship in Africa is a comprehensive review of citizenship from constitutional law to court cases to the everyday problems that Africans without the right papers face. Its focus on the conflicts, often spilling into violence, caused by citizenship disputes is particularly welcome. This book will be a critical resource to understanding future African debates around who belongs to the polity.' Jeffrey Herbst, author of 'States and Power in Africa'

    'This book is meticulous in factual documentation, rigorous in analysis, consistent in intellectual honesty, and optimistic in its vision -- public scholarship at its best. Only such combination of sober reflection and optimistic vision can lay the solid foundation for the sustainable realization of social justice and human dignity in Africa.' - Dr. Abdullahi A. An-Na`im, Charles Howard Candler Professor of Law, Emory University, Atlanta, USA

    'This is a shocking compelling book, detailing in very specific and concrete cases how the power to define who is a citizen shapes the politics of inclusion and exclusion, solidarity and conflict on the African continent. Tracing the roots of the issue to Africa’s colonial past, the book shows how the laws and concepts born from that history continue to shape the possibilities of achieving basic rights to recognition for large numbers of African people, even today. This is a ‘must read’ for those who seek to understand the contemporary challenges of building stability and democracy on the Continent, as well as for those who want to learn lessons for building inclusive citizenship in other parts of the world.' - John Gaventa, Development Research Centre on Citizenship, Participation and Accountability, Institute of Development Studies

    Zed Books wrote this review Wednesday, October 7 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Learning for Development

    Learning for Development

    by Hazel Johnson, Gordon Wilson
    • Rated 5 stars

    'I commend Johnson and Wilson for this excellent book in which they reflect on the role that learning can play in development. It deals with complex issues in a style that is both considered and clear; critical and committed. It should be required reading for those who unreflectively "do development"' - Simon McGrath, Professor of International Education and Development, Nottingham

    'Learning for Development is an exciting read for anyone working in the field, provoking thought by providing real case studies around 'development action'. It focuses on intentional development which is referred to in the book as development action, arguing that the actions of interveners are fundamentally part of and contribute to, development history. It looks at the context in which learning occurs as well as learning as a social process. The concept of ‘action learning space’ can help identify the dynamics in communities through which learning has the potential to occur. Trust and communicative action are key ingredients of shared learning. The book shares practical examples of successes and challenges from which one can learn and then adapt to one’s own work. It is a “must read” for anyone interested in development.' - Charlene Hewat, CEO, Environment Africa

    Zed Books wrote this review Wednesday, October 7 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Living Silence in Burma: Surviving Under Military Rule
    • Rated 5 stars

    'Living Silence is particularly valuable for its study of the psychological effects of military rule on the people of Burma. The real struggle in Burma is the struggle between the desire to opt for the easy option of submitting to the demands of the powers that be and the commitment that leads to the hard road of resisting the threats and blandishments of a ruthless regime. By exploring the impact of military rule on the lives of ordinary people against a broad historical and social backdrop, Christina Fink makes an important contribution towards an understanding of the root causes of the problems and choices that the people of Burma are facing today.' - Aung San Suu Kyi

    'The Burmese students have found their Boswell. Christina Fink has carefully recorded their statements and thoughts. Now, no one can dismiss the tragedy of Burma as the fiction of outsiders. These are the people who have and continue to live with it.' - Professor Josef Silverstein, Rutgers University

    'Christina Fink's Living Silence is a meticulous study of the surreal horror imposed upon the people of Burma by its illegitimate rulers. Read this book and never forget them.' - John Pilger, author

    Zed Books wrote this review Wednesday, October 7 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Iraqi Women: Untold Stories From 1948 to the Present
    • Rated 5 stars

    'An invaluable book ... Al-Ali unearths the stories of Iraq's women, providing thoughtful analysis and reflection on the nature of memory and identity. [It] is also the author's personal story; an act of discovery and also the reclamation of an identity ... this book exhibits the complex and often difficult conjunction between history and personal lives.' - Maysoon Pachachi, Filmmaker

    'An original and engrossing book ... It speaks with an immediacy and an authenticity that should put many ersatz histories of Iraq to shame. I recommend it to all those interested in women's contributions to Iraq.' - Hala Fattah, Historian

    'An extraordinary book ... Particularly sobering is the author's balanced and sensitive analysis of the negative effects on women's rights and lives of the decade of sanctions and the current US- British occupation.' - Lila Abu-Lughod, Professor of Anthropology and Gender Studies, Columbia University

    'Al-Ali draws a vivid picture of Iraqi society and politics using intense personal narratives, and offers alternative visions of modern Iraqi history. An absorbing read.' - Sami Zubaida, Emeritus Professor, Birkbeck, University of London

    'A powerful interrogation of the complex relationships between experience, memory and truth, told through the dynamic narratives of Iraqi women ... a compelling critique of contemporary histories of Iraq which project back into the past relatively newly installed notions of religion and ethnicity.' - Suad Joseph, Professor of Anthropology & Women's Studies, University of California, Davis

    'A finely nuanced account of the experiences of women in Iraq ... Al-Ali's experience of Iraqi society as an insider/outsider, and her understanding of the political background of her informants, enables her to explore the relationship between experiences, memory and truth in ways which will intrigue and excite her readers.' - Peter Sluglett, Professor of Middle Eastern History, University of Utah, Salt Lake City

    '[A collection of] the thoughts, memories and experiences of more than 100 women who, at one time or another, have joined Iraq's huge diaspora in America, Britain and Jordan....the pattern [Al-Ali] draws of the way that educated women's lives have changed and rechanged since Iraq's 1958 revolution is fascinating.' - The Economist

    ‘[This] book makes a vital and original contribution to the literature on Iraq's modern history and to the literature on gender and women's studies. But at the same time its rich, fascinating and revealing text is enormously readable and accessible to the non-specialist, and it deserves a wide readership.’ - Al-Hayat

    'This book is a moving and engrossing exploration of the lives of Iraqi women...Exhibits author's informed and detailed understanding of the social and political history of Iraq...Forms an extremely valuable picture of their lives and experiences.' - Voices

    '...should be required reading for anyone who wants to get beyond the usual litanies of depression about the war and the stereotypes about Middle East women held even by "progressives." Excerpts from a hundred interviews of Iraqi women stud the author's narrative to yeild a detailed, rich and contradictory "alternative history or histories" that begins with late-1940s post-colonial Iraq....It will be left to future writers to explore the rooms whose doors this hallmark new book has opened for us.' - Ellen Cantarow, Counterpunch

    'The women in Nadje Sadig al-Ali's book have some remarkable stories to tell...[she] has performed a vital service in bringing together these testimonies of the human toll for Iraqis of western policy that is never adequately explored in the mainstream media.' - Mike Phipps, Labour Briefing

    'This book is a powerful antidote to the image of Iraqi women as passive victims, promoted by apologists for U.S. imperial policy in order to justify sanctions, war and occupation. It opens a window onto a past all our rulers would rather forget, reminding us that women's struggles for liberation have shaped Iraq's history, even when mere survival would have been achievement enough.' - Anne Alexander, International Socialism

    'A moving, reflexive, and deeply felt account'
    'Timely and crucial research.' - Gender and Development

    Zed Books wrote this review Wednesday, October 7 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Unholy Trinity

    Unholy Trinity

    by Richard Peet
    • Rated 5 stars

    'Seattle, Genoa and Prague have etched the centrality of the IMF, the IBRD and the WTO into our consciousness . Unholy Trinity charts the contours and the reach of these global regulatory institutions and how they serve as a fortress for the prevailing neoliberal theory of globalization.' - Michael Watts, Director, Institute of International Studies, University of California

    'This is a great book.' - David Harvey, City University of New York

    '...offers a fruitful approach, through sophisticated and clearly articulated arguemnts in the chapters, to integrating the role of economic ideas with that of material interests in analyzing the international sponsorship of neoliberal globalization.' - ANNALS of the Association of American Geographers

    'Unholy Trinity provides an important history lesson of how the IMF, World Bank, and WTO were twisted from their original mandates to serve the interests of corporate globalization.' - John Cavanagh, Director, Institute for Policy Studies, and co-author of Alternatives to Economic Globalization: A Better World is Possible

    'This is a terrific book...It is politically committed, theoretically sophisticated, analytically incisive, empirically rich, thoroughly engaged, and full of devastating one-liners that greatly enliven its reading. The energy of the book is reminiscient of that in a live performance by a group of highly talented musicians...The detail contained in the chapters on the IMF, World Bank, and WTO is highly revealing and an enormous strength of the book. Its framing by a carefully considered and coherently applied way of thinking critically is exemplary, and the innovative way in which the book was produced shows, in all sorts of positive ways, in its content. Resistance necessarily involves collaboration, and this book demonstrates such a maxim extrodinarily well.' - Roger Lee, Economic Geography

    Zed Books wrote this review Wednesday, October 7 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Essential Nawal El Saadawi
    • Rated 5 stars

    The writing of Nawal el Saadawi is essential to anyone wishing to understand the contemporary Middle East. Her dissident voice has stayed as consistent in its critique of the neo-imperialist international politics as it has of the oppression of women both in her native Egypt and in the world beyond.
    Saadawi is a figure of international significance and her work has a central place in the history and culture of the Arabic world of the last fifty years. This book, the first volume in 'Zed's Essential Feminists' series, gathers a section of the whole range of Saadawi's writing together in one volume for the first time. From fiction - novellas and short stories - to essays on politics, culture, religion and sex, from extensive interviews to her work as a dramatist, from poetry to selections of her travel writing, this book will be essential to anyone wishing to gain a sense of the total range of Saadawi's work.

    Zed Books wrote this review Wednesday, October 7 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Mothers, Monsters, Whores: Women's Violence in Global Politics
    • Rated 5 stars

    ‘It’s fascinating to see some myths bite the dust. Sjoberg and Gentry shake down the women-as-mostly-nonviolent-victims-of-men’s-wars myth with accounts of women war enthusiasts and perpetrators. More, they show how women’s violent activities can exhibit agency in international relations rather than pathology. Everyone will want to read this’ - Christine Sylvester, Professor of International Relations and Development, Lancaster University

    'Reading Mothers, Monsters, Whores underscores the urgency for us all to come to grips with the reality of women wielding militarized violence. Sjoberg and Gentry reveal graphically the way we construct media images that prop up patriarchal ways of explaining the world' - Cynthia Enloe, Clark University, author of Globalization and Militarism: Feminists Make the Link

    'An important contribution to writings on war and gender.' - Peace News

    Zed Books wrote this review Wednesday, October 7 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Global Body Politics

    Global Body Politics

    by Wendy Harcourt
    • Rated 5 stars

    'Body Politics in Development is about a lot more than "development."This is a book about today's complex international feminist movements. Anyone interested in learning who are the major crafters of feminist discourses, feminist strategies and feminist alliances will be made smarter by reading Wendy Harcourt's deeply informed book.' - Cynthia Enloe, author of 'The Curious Feminist'

    'This is a fascinating and original book. Once I started reading, I couldn't put it down! Wendy Harcourt’s vision of an approach to gender and development as transformative of all relations of power and inequality is breathtaking. Her focus on body politics allows her to strip away the assumptions and myths in gender and development discourses and to explore the "emerging paradigms which are being fostered in the interactions between autonomous feminist movements and transnational economic, environmental and social movements." For those on the inside as well as outside of the development discourse this book is rich with the insights that will provide the knowledge, wisdom and encouragement for the long and winding road ahead.' Peggy Antrobus

    'Development has for long assumed a naturalized notion of the body as 'just there,' a passive receptacle for the consciousness of those to be 'developed or 'liberated.' It is this invisibility of the body that this courageous and eminently applicable book seeks not only to unveil but to reverse, proposing in its stead a view of the body as deeply political, one of the main sites where culture and power intersect. Body Politics in Development asks a series of deeply ethical and complex questions. What types of bodies are assumed in gender and development debates? Who speaks for them? Whose bodies matter? How has development functioned as a political technology that normalizes women's bodies? Conversely, what would it take to enable a multiplicity of diverse lived bodies to emerge? Whether we agree with them of nor, all of us will have to contend with the challenging answers emerging from the illuminating pages of this book if we want to move beyond the current 'empowerment lite' gender and development regime. The author has been one of the, if not the most, central figures in the gender and development debate over the past twenty years, and from this theoretical and practical experience that she has given us one of the most compelling accounts of an area of development -gender and the body-that should, if taken seriously, transform our understanding of the field as a whole. This book should be of great interest for development practitioners at all levels, and for courses in globalization, women's, and development studies as well as courses in anthropology, geography, sociology, and international studies dealing with issues of gender in the Global South.' - Arturo Escobar, Kenan Distinguished Professor of Anthropology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA

    "In simple lucid prose and with the authoritative voice of someone who has engaged over many years with body politics and its contradictions, frustrations and promises, Harcourt has written a book full of tough questions and challenges for the development practitioner." - Gita Sen, Professor, Centre for Public Policy, Indian Institute of Management

    Zed Books wrote this review Wednesday, October 7 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Women, Gender and Development Reader
    • Rated 5 stars

    Third World women were long the undervalued and ignored actors in the development process but are now recognized as playing a critical role. This book has been designed as a comprehensive reader presenting the best of the now vast body of literature that has grown up alongside this acknowledgement.

    The book is divided into five parts, incorporating readings from the leading experts and authorities in each field. The first part acts as an introduction to the field, examining the key theoretical debates and discourses surrounding women and development from a historical perspective. Distinguished practitioners explore the ideas and concepts fundamental for understanding the area: class, ‘race’ and ethnicity, religion, reproduction, persistent inequalities, colonialism, modernization, economic exclusion and patriarchy.

    Part two goes on to look at the household as a unit of analysis; exploring sexuality, single-parent families, agricultural production, and environmental relationships while the third part locates women within the global economy, addressing issues such as industrialization, multi-national companies, Free Trade Zones , the informal sector and the feminization of labour. Part four views the social transformation of women as a consequence of Structural Adjustment Policies and intrusive state policies into women’s health, reproductive rights and sexuality. Next, the volume poses the fundamental questions around women and ideology; do national liberation struggles contradict with feminist movements? What is the impact of religious fundamentalism? Are socialist development processes similar or dissimilar to capitalist processes? How has the transition to capitalism affected women? The final section of the book shows how women from the ground up are organizing themselves for change.

    Case studies drawn from all regions, such as China’s one-child policy, prostitution tourism in Southeast Asia and women’s place in Cuban socialism, vividly illustrate the theoretical debates. A guide to further reading at the end of each chapter provides a foundation for any serious student of women in the development process

    Zed Books wrote this review Wednesday, October 7 2009. ( reply | permalink )
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