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Development as resistance and translation: Remaking norms and ideas of the Gates Foundation

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  • Adam Moe Fejerskov

    (Danish Institute for International Studies, Copenhagen, Denmark)

Abstract

This article explores how ideas and practices manifested in a Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation-funded project on women’s access to land are continuously remade and transformed as they move through the many layers towards implementation. The article builds a theoretical framework that lets us understand development projects as systems of continuous meaning negotiation and translation. It then discusses the particular project’s three dominant reconfigurations of gender and women—from instrumentalizing, to legal-institutional, to transformative and deeply political understandings of the project—as it is continuously remade on its way from headquarter and towards implementation in the Indian state of Odisha.

Suggested Citation

  • Adam Moe Fejerskov, 2018. "Development as resistance and translation: Remaking norms and ideas of the Gates Foundation," Progress in Development Studies, , vol. 18(2), pages 126-143, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:prodev:v:18:y:2018:i:2:p:126-143
    DOI: 10.1177/1464993417750287
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Schurman, Rachel, 2018. "Micro(soft) managing a ‘green revolution’ for Africa: The new donor culture and international agricultural development," World Development, Elsevier, vol. 112(C), pages 180-192.

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