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Developmentality: indirect governance in the World Bank–Uganda partnership

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  • Jon Harald Sande Lie

Abstract

The instituted order of development is changing, creating new power mechanisms ordering the relationship between donor and recipient institutions. Donors’ focus on partnership, participation and ownership has radically transformed the orchestration of aid. While the formal order of this new aid architecture aimed to alter inherently asymmetrical donor–recipient relations by installing the recipient side with greater freedom and responsibility, this article – drawing on an analysis of the World Bank’s Poverty Reduction and Strategy Paper (PRSP) model and its partnership with Uganda – demonstrates how lopsided aid relations are being reproduced in profound ways. Analysed in terms of developmentality, the article shows how the donor aspires to make its policies those of the recipient as a means to govern at a distance, where promises of greater inclusion and freedom facilitate new governance mechanisms enabling the donor to retain control by framing the partnership and thus limiting the conditions under which the recipient exercises the freedom it has been granted.

Suggested Citation

  • Jon Harald Sande Lie, 2015. "Developmentality: indirect governance in the World Bank–Uganda partnership," Third World Quarterly, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 36(4), pages 723-740, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:ctwqxx:v:36:y:2015:i:4:p:723-740
    DOI: 10.1080/01436597.2015.1024435
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