I decided to overhaul my Master’s level course this year, adding new material and dropping old. I was laboring under the reading and re-reading and stress of a new syllabus. Just as I was getting to the point where I thought, “OK, this is good enough, I can get it perfect as the class gets moving,” a close colleague reminded me that a syllabus is a contract, and the more time I invest it in now the easier my life is going to be.
So I persevered, and indeed have one more week, but there are new topics where I’m not sure what I should cover. And maybe good ideas or readings I’ve missed. So the syllabus is below for those who enjoy these things.
You can search for “TBD” if you want to see where I’m undecided: how to talk about “strong societies” and how they shape states and institutions; what to cover on successful state-building in the modern era (ideally domestic reform strategies but also external interventions; and the role of peacekeeping, military intervention, occupation and trustee states.
Recommendations welcome, especially if you can say why.
Course Overview
Nobody agrees on what “political economy of development” actually means. It’s a catch-all course title. In this case, the class is going to tackle a number of “big questions”:
- Why are some countries so poor, repressive, and violent?
- What did rich and stable countries do to end political violence and develop complex, specialized, productive economies?
- Can today’s poor, stagnant and violent countries not copy this? What’s stopping them? Why don’t they reform?
- What role has the West played in either their failure and success?
- What role (if any) should the West play in future? Can any of the things the West does—aid, peacekeeping, military intervention, democracy promotion, state building (whatever that means)—make a difference? Can they make things worse?
- Why do so many programs and reforms and organizations sound good on paper, but then turn out to be so dysfunctional in practice?
Another way to think about my course goal is this: Looking at the countries that are still stagnant or violent, a lot of smart people are genuinely surprised that these countries’s leaders have not been able to make more progress in end violence or implementing good policies. This class is going to try to demystify what’s going on. There are some good reasons leaders don’t make headway, bureaucrats seem slothful, and programs gets perverted. The idea is to talk about the political, economic, and natural logics that lead to function and dysfunction.
A lot of you will graduate and go and do development work of some kind. I can’t tell you what specific programs or reforms to focus on, or how to implement them. What I can do is help you to understand some of the big, revolutionary ideas about why the best plans so often goes awry—ideas that surprisingly few development practitioners ever acquire.
Mostly we’re going to talk about poor and fragile states, and how those states can get on track to growth and middle income status. I’m going to focus on that transition, in part because that’s the big development challenge of your generation: fragile countries are the only ones not growing, and the rest are well on their way to middle or high income status.
Of course, it’s also important to know what middle income states need to do to stay on track and become less corrupt, more just, and develop more complex industrialized economies. But we only have 14 weeks of class, and I don’t really know much about these topics, so like any course this one has a focus. Whatever your plans, I think this class will be helpful and fun for you. But if you really want to know the political economy of development for middle-income nations, one of the other political development core classes might be for you.
This is a global class, but a slightly unbalanced one. A lot of the examples are going to draw on Africa and Latin America, with a good deal on historical European and U.S. development, plus some material on the Middle East and Asia—an ordering determined largely by my knowledge and ignorance.
Finally, as a core course in the Economics and Political Development concentration, this course will be more theoretical and more reading and writing intensive than most other SIPA classes. It is designed to give you an appreciation for big ideas and theories in comparative politics, international relations, political economy, sociology, geography, and development economics.
I won’t have the concrete policy answers in many cases. Actually, no one does, and one of my big aims in this class is to help you learn enough and think critically enough to know why everyone with a clear solution is wrong, and why “development” is the hardest thing in the world. There is no single answer. But there are some principles to finding the right answer in the right situation, and history to learn from. That’s what you’re signing up for in this class.
Weekly readings and schedule
There are few better ways to learn than to read a lot. “Required” readings are, well, required—you’ll need to show that you’ve read and thought about them to do well on the midterm and final.
“Recommended” readings are not required, but I’ll often discuss a key idea or concept in the lecture. You are not responsible for reading these readings, but the ideas we discuss in class are testable.
All the required readings are articles or book chapters that are downloadable online through Columbia’s network or a proxy server. The book chapters that are not on the Internet have Dropbox links. Let me know if any links are broken.
Week 1. Introduction to political and economic development (January 19)
Required readings
- Ferguson, J. with L. Lohmann (1994). “The anti-politics machine: ‘development’ and bureaucratic power in Lesotho.” The Ecologist 24(5).
- Amartya Sen (1988). “The Concept of Development,” Handbook of Development Economics, Volume 1, Edited by H. Chenery and T.N. Srinivasan, Elsevier Science Publishers.
- Marshall, Monty G, and Benjamin R Cole. 2011. “Global Report 2011: Conflict, Governance, and State Fragility.” Polity IV Project. Vienna, VA: Center for Systemic Peace.
- Rodrik, Dani. “The Past, Present, and Future of Economic Growth.” Global Citizen Foundation Working Paper 1 (2013). (Skip technical bits in sections 6-8)
Recommended readings
- Chapters 1 to 3 of Maddison, Angus. 2001. “The World Economy: A Millennial Perspective” OECD. (Courseworks)
- Binyavanga Wainaina (2005). How to Write About Africa. Granta 92.
Week 2. Order and violence (January 26)
Required readings
- James Fearon (1995). “Rationalist Explanations for War,” International Organization 49(3), p379-414.
- Amos Sawyer (2004). “Violent conflicts and governance challenges in West Africa: the case of the Mano River basin area.” The Journal of Modern African Studies 42(03).
- Olson, Mancur. 1993. “Dictatorship, Democracy, and Development.” American Political Science Review 87(3): 567-576.
- Tilly, Charles (1985). “War making and state making as organized crime,” in Bringing the State Back In, eds P.B. Evans, D. Rueschemeyer, & T. Skocpol. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985.
Recommended readings
- Chapter 2 in Robert H. Bates (2008). When Things Fell Apart: State Failure in Late-Century Africa. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
- Bates, Robert, Avner Greif, and Smita Singh. “Organizing violence.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 46.5 (2002): 599-628.
- Introduction and Chapter 1 of Gambetta, D. (1996). The Sicilian Mafia: the business of private protection. Harvard University Press.
- Henry Farrell. “Dark Leviathan: The Silk Road might have started as a libertarian experiment, but it was doomed to end as a fiefdom run by pirate kings.” Aeon. 20 February, 2015.
- David Skarbek on Prison Gangs and the Social Order of the Underworld. EconTalk. March 2015.
- de la Sierra, Raúl Sánchez. 2015. “On the Origin of States: Stationary Bandits and Taxation in Eastern Congo.” Working paper.
- Collier, Paul, and Anke Hoeffler. “Greed and grievance in civil war.” Oxford economic papers 56.4 (2004): 563-595.
- Blattman, Christopher, and Edward Miguel. “Civil War.” Journal of Economic Literature 48.1 (2010): 3-57.
Week 3. Order through states (February 2)
Required readings
- Chapter 2 of Samuels, David J. 2012. Comparative Politics. Pearson Higher Education.
- Chapters 1 and 2 in Jeffrey Herbst (2000). States and Power in Africa: Comparative Lessons in Authority and Control. Princeton: Princeton University Press. (see Courseworks)
- Chapter 1 of Dipali Mukhopadhyay. 2014. Warlords, strongman governors, and the state in Afghanistan. Cambridge University Press. (The Kindle version of Chapter 1 is available on Amazon for free by clicking on “Send a free sample”)
- Preface (p. ix-xxvi) in James C. Scott. (2012). Two Cheers for Anarchism.
Recommended readings
- Vu, Tuong. “Studying the state through state formation.” World politics 62.01 (2010): 148-175.
- Spruyt, Hendrik. “The origins, development, and possible decline of the modern state.” Annual Review of Political Science 5.1 (2002): 127-149.
- Chinese Legalism, BBC4 In Our Times podcast
- James A. Robinson (2002). “States and Power in Africa by Jeffrey I. Herbst: A Review Essay.” Journal of Economic Literature 40(2): 510-519.
- Chapter 7 of Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson (2012). Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity and Poverty
- Barry Weingast on Law. EconTalk. August 2014.
- Weingast on the Violence Trap. August 2013. EconTalk.
Week 4. What are institutions? How do they affect growth? (February 8)
Required readings
- North, Douglass Cecil. Transaction costs, institutions, and economic performance. San Francisco, CA: ICS Press, 1992.
- Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, and James Robinson. (2005). “Institutions as a fundamental cause of long-run growth.” Handbook of Economic Growth 1: 385-472.
- Read introduction of Glaeser, Edward L., et al. “Do institutions cause growth?” Journal of Economic Growth 9.3 (2004): 271-303.
- Read introduction of Akee, Randall, Miriam Jorgensen, and Uwe Sunde. “Critical junctures and economic development–Evidence from the adoption of constitutions among American Indian Nations.” Journal of Comparative Economics 43.4 (2015): 844-861.
- Note we discuss neoclassical economic growth models, which you will have seen in the EPD core economic development course. If you need a review, see Chapter 4 of Perkins et al. (2012). Economics of development.
Recommended readings
- Abhijit Banerjee and Lakshmi Iyer, “History, Institutions and Economic Performance: the Legacy of Colonial Land Tenure Systems in India.” American Economic Review 95, no. 4 (September 2005): 1190-1213.
- Leonard Wantchekon, Natalija Novta, and Marko Klasnja (2012). “Education and Human Capital Externalities: Evidence from Colonial Benin,” Working Paper.
- Przeworski, Adam. “Democracy and economic development.” Mansfield & R. Sisson (Eds.), The evolution of political knowledge. democracy, autonomy, and conflict in comparative and international politics (2004): 300-324.
- Daron Acemoglu, Suresh Naidu, Pascual Restrepo, and James Robinson. 2015. “Democracy Does Cause Growth”
Week 5. How do open and inclusive institutions come about? (February 16)
Required readings
- Chapter 6 of Clark, William Roberts, Matt Golder, and Sona Nadenichek Golder. Principles of comparative politics. CQ Press, 2012.
- Douglass C. North, John J. Wallis & Barry R. Weingast (2009). Violence and the rise of open-access orders. Journal of Democracy, 20(1), 55-68.
- Mahoney, James. 2001. “Path-Dependent Explanations of Regime Change: Central America in Comparative Perspective.” Studies in Comparative International Development 36 (1): 111–41.
- Chapter 6 of Van de Walle, Nicolas. African economies and the politics of permanent crisis, 1979-1999. Cambridge University Press, 2001.
- Note that if you did not read it last week, it’s important to know Sections 5 to end of Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, and James Robinson. (2005). “Institutions as a fundamental cause of long-run growth.” Handbook of Economic Growth 1: 385-472.
Recommended readings
- Rodrik, Dani. “When Ideas Trump Interests: Preferences, Worldviews, and Policy Innovations.” The Journal of Economic Perspectives 28.1 (2014): 189-208.
- Landes, D. S. (2006). “Why Europe and the West? Why Not China?” Journal of Economic Perspectives 20(2): 3-22.
- Chapter 7 of Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson (2012). Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity and Poverty.
- Chapter 2 of John Ishiyama (2012). Comparative Politics: Principles of Democracy and Democratization. Wiley Blackwell (Available free online through Columbia Library)
- Pierson, Paul. “Increasing returns, path dependence, and the study of politics.” American Political Science Review (2000): 251-267.
- Chapter 3 of Acemoglu, Daron, and James A. Robinson. Economic origins of dictatorship and democracy. Cambridge University Press, 2005.
Week 6. Geographic drivers of states, institutions, and growth (February 23)
Required readings
- Chapter 4 of Jared Diamond (1997). Guns, Germs, and Steel. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
- Chapter 5 in Jeffrey Herbst (2000). States and Power in Africa: Comparative Lessons in Authority and Control. Princeton: Princeton University Press. (see Courseworks)
- Mellinger, Andrew D., Jeffrey D. Sachs, and John L. Gallup (1999). “Climate, Water Navigability, and Economic Development”
- Engerman, Stanley L, and Kenneth L Sokoloff. 2005. “Institutional and Non-Institutional Explanations of Economic Differences.” In Handbook of New Institutional Economics, edited by C Menard and M.M. Shirley, 639–65. Amsterdam: Springer.
Recommended readings
- Chapters 1 and 2 of David Landes (1999). The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some Are So Rich and Some So Poor.
- Nunn, Nathan, and Diego Puga. 2010. “Ruggedness: The Blessing of Bad Geography in Africa.” Review of Economics and Statistics 94 (1): 20–36.
- Marcella Alsan (2012). “The Effect of the Tse Tse Fly on African Development,” unpublished working paper.
- Alesina, Alberto, William Easterly, and Janina Matuszeski. 2011. “Artificial States.” Journal of the European Economic Association 9 (2): 246–77.
- The full book is excellent: Jared Diamond (1997). Guns, Germs, and Steel. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
- Easterly and R. Levine (2003). “Tropics, germs, and crops: the role of endowments in economic development” Journal of Monetary Economics, 50:1.
Week 7. Culture and societies as a determinant of institutions (March 1)
- Chapter 1 of Scott, J. C. (2009). The art of not being governed: An anarchist history of upland Southeast Asia, Yale University Press.
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
Recommended readings
- Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson. 2015. “Paths to Inclusive Political Institutions”
- Chapter 3 of Clark, William Roberts, Matt Golder, and Sona Nadenichek Golder. Principles of comparative politics. CQ Press, 2012.
- Alesina, Alberto, and Paola Giuliano. 2013. “Culture and Institutions.”
- Inglehart, Ronald. “Culture and Democracy,” Harrison, Lawrence E., and Samuel P. Huntington. Culture matters: How values shape human progress. Basic books, 2000.
- Chapter X of Putnam, Robert D., Robert Leonardi, and Raffaella Y. Nanetti. Making democracy work: Civic traditions in modern Italy. Princeton university press, 1994.
- Djankov, Simeon, et al. “The new comparative economics.” Journal of comparative economics 31.4 (2003): 595-619.
- Clark, William Roberts, Matt Golder, and Sona N. Golder. “Power and politics: insights from an exit, voice, and loyalty game.” Unpublished manuscript, University of Michigan and Pennsylvania State University (2013).
- Roland, Gérard. “Understanding institutional change: fast-moving and slow-moving institutions.” Studies in Comparative International Development 38.4 (2004): 109-131.
- Friedland, Roger, and Robert R. Alford. “Bringing society back in: Symbols, practices and institutional contradictions.” (1991): 232-263.
- “Paul Robinson on Cooperation, Punishment and the Criminal Justice System,” EconTalk Episode with Russ Robert, August 31, 2015
- De Tocqueville, Alexis. Democracy in America.
Week 8. In-class midterm (March 8)
Week 9. Spring break (no class March 15)
Week 10. Legacies of Western mercantilism, slavery, colonialism, capitalism, socialism, and wars (March 22)
Required readings
- Chapter 2 of Migdal, Joel S. Strong societies and weak states: state-society relations and state capabilities in the Third World. Princeton University Press, 1988.
- Chapter 2 of Mahmood Mamdani (1996). “Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism,” Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Leander Heldring and James A Robinson. 2013. “Colonialism and development in Africa” VoxEU.
- Read introduction to: Nathan Nunn. “The long-term effects of Africa’s slave trades”. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 123(1): 139-176, 2008.
Recommended readings
- Heldring, Leander, and James A. Robinson. Colonialism and Economic Development in Africa. No. w18566. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2012.
- Hariri, Jacob G. “The Autocratic Legacy of Early Statehood.” American Political Science Review 106.3 (2012).
- Michalopoulos, Stelios, and Elias Papaioannou. 2013. “Pre‐Colonial Ethnic Institutions and Contemporary African Development.” Econometrica 81 (1): 113–52.
Week 11. Late states, weak states, and the politics of survival (March 29)
Required readings
- Chapter 8 of Migdal, Joel S. Strong societies and weak states: state-society relations and state capabilities in the Third World. Princeton University Press, 1988.
- Bates, Robert H., John H. Coatsworth, and Jeffrey G. Williamson. 2007. “Lost Decades: Post-independence Performance in Latin America and Africa.” The Journal of Economic History.
- Van de Walle, Nicolas. “Economic Reform: Patterns and Constraints.” Democratic Reform in Africa. The Quality of Progress (2004): 29-63.
- TBD
- Revisit from Week 3: Chapter 2 of Samuels, David J. 2012. Comparative Politics. Pearson Higher Education. (especially second half of chapter on late state development)
Recommended readings
- Chapters 3 to 7 in Migdal, Joel S. Strong societies and weak states: state-society relations and state capabilities in the Third World. Princeton University Press, 1988.
- Valerie Bockstette, Areendam Chanda, and Louis Putterman (2002). States and Markets: the Advantage of an Early Start, Journal of Economic Growth, 7, 347-369.
- Robert Klitgaard. 2013. “Tropical Gangsters II: Adventures in Development in the World’s Poorest Places” Amazon Digital Services.
- Robinson, James A. “Colombia: Another 100 years of solitude.” Current history 112.751 (2013): 43-48.
- Olken, Benjamin A., and Rohini Pande. 2012. “Corruption in Developing Countries.” Annual Review of Economics 4 (1): 479–509.
- Alesina, A. and D. Dollar (2000). “Who Gives Foreign Aid to Whom and Why?” Journal of Economic Growth, 5, 33-64.
Week 12. The politics of foreign aid (April 5)
Required readings
- William Easterly (2009) “Can the West Save Africa?” Journal of Economic Literature 47(2).
- Moss, Todd, Gunilla Pettersson, and Nicolas Van de Walle (2006). “An aid-institutions paradox? A review essay on aid dependency and state building in sub-Saharan Africa.” Center for Global Development working paper 74.
- TBD
- TBD
Recommended readings
- UN Millennium Project, Jeffrey D. Sachs, Investing in Development: A Practical Plan to Achieve the Millennium Development Goals, January 2005 (Chapters 1 and 2)
- Chapter 5 of Van de Walle, Nicolas. 2001. African Economies and the Politics of Permanent Crisis, 1979-1999. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Michael Clemens and Todd Moss (2005). What’s Wrong with the Millennium Development Goals? CGD Brief.
- Eric Werker and Faisal Z. Ahmed (2008). “What Do Nongovernmental Organizations Do?” Journal of Economic Perspectives 22:2.
- Nunn, Nathan, and Nancy Qian. “U.S. Food Aid and Civil Conflict.” American Economic Review.
- Nancy Birdsall (2004). Seven Deadly Sins: Reflections on Donor Failings, CGD Working Paper 50.
- William Easterly and Tobias Pfutze, Where Does the Money Go? Best and Worst Practices in Foreign Aid” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 22, No.2, Spring 2008.
Week 13. Peace and statebuilding (April 12)
Required readings
- Pritchett, Lant, Michael Woolcock, and Matt Andrews. “Looking like a state: techniques of persistent failure in state capability for implementation.” The Journal of Development Studies 49.1 (2013): 1-18.
- Weinstein, Jeremy M. 2005. “Autonomous Recovery and International Intervention in Comparative Perspective.” Center for Global Development Working Paper 57.
- TBD
- TBD
Recommended readings
- Evans, Peter B. “Predatory, developmental, and other apparatuses: a comparative political economy perspective on the third world state.” Sociological Forum. Vol. 4. No. 4. Kluwer Academic Publishers-Plenum Publishers, 1989.
- Myerson, Roger B. “The autocrat’s credibility problem and foundations of the constitutional state.” American Political Science Review 102.01 (2008): 125-139.
- Herbst, J. (1996). “Responding to State Failure in Africa.” International Security 21(3).
- Weingast “In the Shadow of Violence: A New Perspective on Development.” Working Paper, Hoover Institution, Stanford University, July 2015.
- Fearon, James D, and David D Laitin. 2004. “Neotrusteeship and the Problem of Weak States.” International Security 28 (4): 5–43.
- Fortna, Virginia Page. “Does Peacekeeping Keep Peace? International Intervention and the Duration of Peace After Civil War.” International Studies Quarterly 48 (2004): 269–292.
- Chong-En Bai, Chang-Tai Hsieh, Zheng (Michael) Song. 2014. “Crony Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics” Working paper. (And Youtube presentation)
- Shringarpure, Bhakti. “In Conversation with Mahmood Mamdani.” Warscapes, July 15, 2013.
- John Merriman’s lecture on the European enlightenment (#5), Robespierre (#6) and nationalism (#13) on YouTube or iTunes University
Week 14. Democratization, democracy promotion, and regime change (April 19)
Required readings
- Chapter 5 of Samuels, David J. 2012. Comparative Politics. Pearson Higher Education.
- William Easterly (2011). “Benevolent Autocrats.” unpublished working paper.
- TBD
- TBD
Recommended readings
- Gandhi, Jennifer. Political Institutions under Dictatorship. Cambridge University Press New York, 2008. (Introduction)
- p. 75-92 of Claude Ake (2000). The Feasibility of Democracy in Africa. Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa. (see Courseworks)
- Besley, Timothy and Masayuki Kudamatsu (2007). “Making Autocracy Work.” Unpublished working paper.
- Gandhi, Jennifer, and Ellen Lust-Okar. “Elections under authoritarianism.” Annual review of political science 12 (2009): 403-422.
- Monica Martinez-Bravo, Gerard Padró-i-Miquel, Nancy Qian and Yang Yao (2013) “Political Reform in China: Elections, Public Goods and Income Distribution” Working paper.
- Monica Martinez-Bravo, Gerard Padró-i-Miquel, Nancy Qian and Yang Yao (2011) “Do Local Elections in Non-Democracies Increase Accountability? Evidence from Rural China,” NBER Working Paper # 16948
- Jones, Benjamin F., and Benjamin A. Olken. “Do Leaders Matter? National Leadership and Growth Since World War II.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 120 (2005): 835–864.
- Haber, Stephen (2008). “Authoritarian government.” The Oxford Handbook of Political Economy: 693-707.
- Gandhi, Jennifer, and Ellen Lust-Okar. “Elections Under Authoritarianism.” Annual Review of Political Science 12, no. 1 (2009): 403–422.
Week 15. Organizations, institutions, and approached for development (April 26)
Required readings
- Introduction (p.1-8) and Chapter 10 (Conclusions) in James C. Scott. (1998). Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed. (see Courseworks)
- William Easterly. Planners vs. Searchers in Foreign Aid, Asian Development Review, 23, no. 2, (2006): 1-35.
- TBD
- TBD
- Video: Lant Pritchett (2010) The best of aid.
- If you didn’t read it in Week 1, see: Ferguson, J. with L. Lohmann (1994). “The anti-politics machine: ‘development’ and bureaucratic power in Lesotho.” The Ecologist 24(5).
Recommended readings
- Paul Seabright. 1999. “The Aestheticising Vice,” London Review of Books 21(11), p.26-27
- Bradford DeLong. 1999. “Forests, Trees, and Intellectual Roots…: A review of James Scott’s Seeing Like a State.”
- Rodrik, Dani. “When Ideas Trump Interests: Preferences, Worldviews, and Policy Innovations.” The Journal of Economic Perspectives 28.1 (2014): 189-208.
- Fernandez, Raquel, and Dani Rodrik. “Resistance to reform: Status quo bias in the presence of individual-specific uncertainty.” The American economic review (1991): 1146-1155.
- UN Millennium Project, Jeffrey D. Sachs, Investing in Development: A Practical Plan to Achieve the Millennium Development Goals, January 2005 (Chapters 1 and 2)
- Dani Rodrik (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.
- Andrews, Matt, Lant Pritchett, and Michael Woolcock. “Escaping capability traps through problem driven iterative adaptation (PDIA).” World Development 51 (2013): 234-244.
100 Responses
updated link for how to write about Africa: http://granta.com/how-to-write-about-africa/
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@cblatts this might be of interest: https://t.co/0swBmbO85J – migrant right are key to effects, politics and policies
@cblatts how about adding something about migration and devel? As @m_clem argues, most effective devel tool not on the agenda
Chris, first I think it is very brave and laudable to put your course to public scrutiny. Not only you teach what you preach with example but also gives a sign of your accountability with the class. I took your course at SIPA in Spring 2014. And now working for a humanitarian agency – which totally blew my mind how related is to my previous work experience (international financial institution) – precisely because of some very important readings we had in your class. Please keep including fun pictures and videos in your presentations (maybe TED talks?) to complement. Here is my opinion and I hope you find it useful. Your course was one of my favorite courses at SIPA – at it was a very useful course to go to Uganda during the summer. Your advice on the helmet… was totally right.
The most useful weeks for me that apply directly to my current job are the following:
All week 1 readings
Week 2 is new and I love it, I wish I had that before.
Week 3, Herbst is not the most fun author to read, but I still remember the maps and DRC explainaition (was this this book? maybe I’m confusing it). Dipali M also very useful.
Week 4: we know you love Acemoglu… and we understood why after this class. It is a mandatory for any public administrator! (or international civil servant) Glaeser is good too. Wantchekon should be a must-read for those specializing in Education or anyone interested in capacity-building.
Week 5 – Mahoney definitely, John North and Van de Walle is so relevant 15 years later.
Week 6 – J. Diamond is so good! Sachs (yes Sachs) that is a good reading for those in sustainable development and Sokoloff.
Week 7 – are you going something like Max Weber and the protestant ethic or more on the soft elements of culture? maybe divide into the 2 elements (hard/soft) and then go from there. Just humble suggestion.
Week 10 – Mandami… definitely. Nunn too.
Week 11. You tweak this week. Like it (the recommended readings)
Week 12. Easterly is a must. Are they going to read the other side of the coin? (besides Sachs that I see on the recommended readings) meaning Moyo with Dead Aid? Read it for other class and its cool.
Week 13. Ok now we are talking our topics. Why dont you include Durable Peace: the challenges for peacebuilding in Africa (chapter 10) and include some of the role of the private sector (that no one includes and it’s huge) for political stability.
Week 14. Mind-blowing Benevolent Autocrats. Include maybe something on participation (e.g. participatory budget) for democratization of political processes?
Week 15. One of my favorite readings, planners vs. searches in foreign aid (Easterly) keep it.
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
You need the introductory chapter in: http://www.amazon.com/Confronting-Global-Neoliberalism-Resistance-Development/dp/0932863612/
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @Columbia: RT @ColumbiaSIPA: Professor Chris Blattman previews his Spring 2016 course in Political Economy of Development: https://t.co/…
Wow! MT @fp2p Interested in political economy of devt? @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/GVHTz8fwiD
@cblatts Enough with the institutions.
@cblatts Dependency theory? Development state theory? ECLAC? Neoliberalism? International lending, debt crises, structural adjustment?
RT @cblatts: Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/FCELPYitFk
Can’t help being sucked in by the cheek @cblatts! Some focus on South-South dynamics would be relevant. https://t.co/A2maC0TQt8
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @ColumbiaSIPA: Professor Chris Blattman previews his Spring 2016 course in Political Economy of Development: @cblatts https://t.co/1Bl4A…
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
.@fp2p @cblatts Chris, week 5 on institutions would benefit from Elinor Ostrom, Kathleen Theelen on institutional change. Can email reco’s
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @Columbia: RT @ColumbiaSIPA: Professor Chris Blattman previews his Spring 2016 course in Political Economy of Development: https://t.co/…
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @ColumbiaSIPA: Professor Chris Blattman previews his Spring 2016 course in Political Economy of Development: @cblatts https://t.co/1Bl4A…
RT @Columbia: RT @ColumbiaSIPA: Professor Chris Blattman previews his Spring 2016 course in Political Economy of Development: https://t.co/…
Great reading list – for the lesson on Democratization, Democracy Promotion and Regime Change, I recommend opening chapter of Carothers/de Gramont book on Development Aid Confronts Politics: The Almost Revolution. Offers excellent overview of the role of “politics” in international development , and also will help with the gender imbalance.
RT @Columbia: RT @ColumbiaSIPA: Professor Chris Blattman previews his Spring 2016 course in Political Economy of Development: https://t.co/…
RT @ColumbiaSIPA: Professor Chris Blattman previews his Spring 2016 course in Political Economy of Development: https://t.co/RtTqauFYyC
RT @ColumbiaSIPA: Professor Chris Blattman previews his Spring 2016 course in Political Economy of Development: @cblatts https://t.co/1Bl4A…
Professor Chris Blattman previews his Spring 2016 course in Political Economy of Development: @cblatts https://t.co/1Bl4AOTfDI
RT @oxfamgbpolicy: RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list https://t.co/5IyqIQZ…
https://t.co/ZVy9oSo1sI
Great reading list!!!
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list https://t.co/5IyqIQZXQT
Perhaps you can consider for the ‘TBDs” the following:
“Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed,” by Jared Diamond (2005)
“Culture Matters: How Values Shape Human Progress,” by Lawrence E. Harrison and Samuel P. Hutchinson (1999)
“The Central Liberal Truth: How Politics Can Change a Culture and Save It,” by Lawrence E. Harrison (2006)
“Why States Recover: Changing Walking Societies into Winning Nations, from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe,” by Greg Mills (2015)
Dani Rodrik and S. Mukand “The Political Economy of Liberal Democracy” examines why some democracies develop strong protection of civil rights for minorities in addition to protection for property and civil rights. http://drodrik.scholar.harvard.edu/publications/political-economy-liberal-democracy
Help me improve my “political economy of development” course?: I decided to overhaul my Master’s level course … https://t.co/vl8KXOLbFb
For Peace and Statebuilding Week:
McLoughlin, Claire. “When Does Service Delivery Improve the Legitimacy of a Fragile or Conflict‐Affected State?.” Governance (2014).
Most useful for its discussion of the trade-off between legitimizing state authority and improving immediate term welfare through non-state service provision.
Just one little suggestion. You mention Tocqueville’s Democracy in America under the recommended readings for week 7 on culture and institutions. I found the following essay, which summarises Tocqueville’s position on the role of culture in the formation of institutions, quite interesting:
Meyer, Heinz-Dieter. 2003. “Tocqueville’s Cultural Institutionalism Reconciling Collective Culture and Methodological Individualism”, Journal of Classical Sociology, vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 197-220. (http://jcs.sagepub.com/content/3/2/197.abstract)
On aid, democracy promotion and regime, I quite liked Bader, Julia, and Jörg Faust. 2014. “Foreign Aid, Democratization, and Autocratic Survival.” International Studies Review 16(4): 575–95. (http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/misr.12158/abstract) It nicely connects the foreign aid and democratization/regime change literatures. Also most of the stuff by Simone Dietrich & Joe Wright would also nicely fit here.
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
Interesting reading list. Help chrisblattman improve “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/DbFVB0wv2G
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
More African authors please! If we are to explain Africa, why not ask academics from there. They exist but have a visibility problem in US/UK universities.
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @poconofoothills: tgrey913: RT fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and r… ht…
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
tgrey913: RT fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and r… https://t.co/WcYcCGK1Mf
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
RT @fp2p: Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i…
Interested in political economy of devt? Check out @cblatts great syllabus + reading list, and readers additions https://t.co/g6i07l0Bis
.@cblatts [Week 12, recommended reading maybe] suggestion for students interested in aid sanctions/politics: https://t.co/lac7hjgYGo
RT @cblatts: Crowdsourcing syllabus ideas is working very well, though volume of sugg readings may exceed my capacity to read… https://t.…
RT @borgesbm: Que beleza é esse programa da aula de “Economia Política do Desenvolvimento” do @cblatts. https://t.co/PFsGcyvftI
Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/xlLMWhkmER
RT @cblatts: Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/FCELPYitFk
@cblatts Put “This is not a contract,” on your syllabus. Problem solved.
@roudabehkishi @cblatts That just happens to be the only section of the syllabus I feel qualified to make suggestions.
Do you know anyone who is redesigning their course around the following ideas to have emerged from September (Pope and sustainability goals at UN) .Uniquely these transformations have come from dialogues have been directed by quite wealthy but concerned New Yorkers and counterparts at dialogue spaces such as Windsor Castle UK and Open Space Beijing. Moreover there is a feeling that development is not just a a foreign issue, if projections are right that populations of New York suburbs will double in next 10 years then sustainability goals have edgy relevance to more than a few regional communities and families
It would be timely to go back to the goals-designed systems view expressed in last chapter of keynes general theory – in particular his idea that there would come a time when transformation would need to match the most exciting decade for students and their livelihoods
In this regard why not take each of the 17 sustainability goals and conduct search of which economist youth could most livelihoods trust to which sustainability goal- and then orientate reading mainly around those economist and goal compounding system designs
the question then becomes which of the above weeks remains structurally suitable because within its frame of reference – all the goals cases are consistent; and which of the weeks themes is complex because opposite lessons are prompted by different goal contexts
we would like to support and systems professor who agrees that making 2016-2025 students most exciting decade is not some luxury or idealist notion but sustainability critical given how many tipping points the 17 goals are at.
RT @cblatts: Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/FCELPYitFk
@ClaireAdida @cblatts Frances Stewart or Gudrun Østby on inequality (wk 5 or 7)
@gtallen89 @cblatts Agreed. Tho I’d hope you consider integrating these scholars more largely not just as a token female to address concerns
A MA PolEcon of Development Syllabus – https://t.co/dQzQctJ5Xy
@ClaireAdida @cblatts Also: Elinor Ostrom (wk1), Martha Finnemore (wk7), Deborah Brautigam (wk12), Clionadh Raleigh or Sabine Carey (wk2)
@ClaireAdida @cblatts Those would be some of my recs too
I recently took a similar graduate-level course on development, and we spent a few weeks discussing institutions, governance, and the power and failures of external actors. For your week on institutions, I might add Chapter 3 of Acemoglu and Robinson’s “The Making of Prosperity and Poverty,” which has a nice discussion of inclusive vs. extractive institutions that begins with a comparison of North and South Korea – it’s very accessible and I noticed that you have another chapter from this book on the syllabus already. David Booth has a short piece on the World Bank blog (http://bit.ly/1Crl0oC) that highlights the challenges of “improving governance,” and Chapter 3 of Ha-Joon Chang’s Kicking Away the Ladder argues that institutions must be analyzed only with a strong historical perspective. Merilee Grindle’s (2004) “Good Enough Governance: Poverty Reduction and Reform in Developing Countries” (Governance 17, 4 (October): 525-548) makes a similar argument, and adds some recommendations about which policies developing country governments should focus on first.
For the week on geography, Jeffrey Sachs (2001) has a short piece called Geography and Economic Development (http://bit.ly/1OmPlWV). This is based on the Gallup, Sachs, and Mellinger (1999) piece, “Geography and Economic Development” published in International Regional Science Review 22 (2): 179-232. Both are good, but as a student myself, I recommend the shorter version!
During our class about culture, we read a few pieces that were good at spurring discussion among all students, even those who didn’t have a lot to say during about other weeks’ topics. Chapter 5 of Mike Tidwell’s Ponds of Kalambayi (1990) does a great job of illustrating cultural difference even when everyone has the best intentions. It’s a fun read that offers a lot, and any returned Peace Corps volunteers in your class will probably have some similar stories to share! Habyarimana, Humphreys, Posner, and Weinstein (2007) use some game theory and econometrics to provide some answers to the question, “Why Does Ethnic Diversity Undermine Public Goods Provision” (American Political Science Review 101, 4:709-725); their analysis highlights some common answers to the question and provides a nice conclusion. In a field where so much is left to future study, I personally think empirical papers that find concrete answers make a good change of pace. Finally, Fareed Zakaria’s 1994 interview with Lee Kuan Yew (Foreign Affairs, v. 73) is an interesting discussion point, since Lee Kuan Yew is adamant that something about Singapore culture is unique and crucial to understanding the country’s economic success.
For the week on the legacy of the West and colonialism, I highly recommend Paul Farmer’s (2004) “Anthropology of Structural Violence” (Current Anthropology 45, 3: 305-317). The piece discusses Haiti’s past in light of its relationship with the French and the U.S., and will be great discussion fodder for multiple weeks.
Finally, I think it might be nice to add a discussion of community-driven development or the sub-field of development micro; I’m sure there are quite a few SIPA students with potential interest in RCTs and other evaluation techniques, but they might not be aware of those interests yet! Microeconomic development also provides interesting parallels between the country-level issues you’ve highlighted (why don’t poor countries just do what rich countries have done to succeed?), because it can shine a light on the constraints facing the world’s poor that we might not take into account. Maybe during the culture week you could add something? I think it’s important to give students a way to talk about why people in poor countries might differ from those in more developed countries (and people of different income levels within the same country) can’t be easily compared, while still maintaining sensitivity and avoiding ignorant comments brought about by privilege. Poor Economics by Banerjee and Duflo is popular with all my friends who have read it, even those who hate economics, so the introduction could be a good read.
That’s all for now – your course looks really interesting, and your future students are lucky to have a professor who’s working so hard to make their syllabus perfect!
RT @cblatts: Crowdsourcing syllabus ideas is working very well, though volume of sugg readings may exceed my capacity to read… https://t.…
RT @cblatts: Crowdsourcing syllabus ideas is working very well, though volume of sugg readings may exceed my capacity to read… https://t.…
@roudabehkishi @cblatts Barb Walter, Desha Girod for Week 13. Cathy Boone for Week 7. Dambisa Moyo for Week 12 (UGs love her). All women.
RT @cblatts: Crowdsourcing syllabus ideas is working very well, though volume of sugg readings may exceed my capacity to read… https://t.…
RT @cblatts: Crowdsourcing syllabus ideas is working very well, though volume of sugg readings may exceed my capacity to read… https://t.…
Crowdsourcing syllabus ideas is working very well, though volume of sugg readings may exceed my capacity to read… https://t.co/ecvBLkDn20
@cblatts @EmirOmeragi Doctrines of Development Cowen & Shenton esp on trusteeship
For week 7, “The Clan and the City” by Greif and Tabellini (http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2101460) on how morality, institutions, and economic growth interact. The paper compares the form of economic and social organization in Europe (corporations) to that in China (the clan), which both resulted from and perpetuated generalized and limited types of moral systems, respectively. Greif also gave a talk on the paper that summarizes the main take-aways (and then reviews a bunch of Chinese history that students may be happy to skip if they’re not interested in that kind fo thing, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlihEnv8Fuw).
@cblatts @CairneyPaul and make them read exit voice and loyalty just for the treatment of sloth ;)
@cblatts @CairneyPaul perhaps add ‘Development Projects Observed’ by AO Hirschman (and the WB riposte https://t.co/qD0htOjg6I )
Maybe excerpts of Ostrom (1990) on institutional change?
@cblatts maybe something on Western Balkans and the curious case of Bosnia
https://t.co/ThITT0bJIl
@cblatts Is it working? Might pinch your idea if it makes a difference.
RT @cblatts: Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/FCELPYitFk
@cblatts You might consider including more lit on social movements, unions and state society interactions. eg Heller’s “Moving the State”..?
RT @cblatts: Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/FCELPYitFk
@roudabehkishi @cblatts You might include Susan Strange in Week 3. Both important theoretically and helps address Roudabeh’s concern.
Que beleza é esse programa da aula de “Economia Política do Desenvolvimento” do @cblatts. https://t.co/PFsGcyvftI
RT @cblatts: Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/FCELPYitFk
@cblatts As it stands now, I don’t think even a single piece authored by a woman falls under your required rdgs
@cblatts Female scholars are so extremely underrepresented on your syllabus :(
Week 13:
Keen, David. Complex Emergencies, Polity, 2008 useful to understand why the state of war can offer more incentives than peace.
For the mafia you could switch to one of these
Paolo Buonanno, Ruben Durante, Giovanni Prarolo and Paolo Vanin, 2011, “On the historical and geographic origins of the Sicilian mafia”
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2009808
Arcangelo Dimico, Alessia Isopi and Ola Olsson, 2012, “Origins of the Sicilian Mafia: The Market for Lemons”
https://gupea.ub.gu.se/bitstream/2077/29193/1/gupea_2077_29193_1.pdf
@cblatts On Institutions (if any space left): this paper could be interesting (or just the vox column) https://t.co/qDF2pp9rMl
RT @cblatts: Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/FCELPYitFk
RT @cblatts: Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/FCELPYitFk
I am a bit surprised not to see Besley and Persson on state capacity somewhere – not sure where, week 3? Idea that states need to invest in capacity to tax and might have reasons for not doing so seems like a key one, and that state capacity strongly associated with prosperity.
intro to book is free online if that makes any difference to you
http://press.princeton.edu/titles/9624.html
although maybe some of their papers better for your purposes.
on politics of foreign aid, the relevant bit from Angus Deaton’s book? And I can see why you might not be terribly interested in it, but recent empirical investigation into that question:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S030438781500111X
(Deaton himself – in a podcast with Owen Barder … or maybe EconTalk – said he did not think effect of aid on political institutions could be empirically identified)
maybe something on conditionality there too, about when donors can influence policy in developing countries (and whether it is a good idea to try). Not sure what the best ref is there, a recent one is:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/sjoe.12085/pdf
@cblatts Amazing syllabus. On aid, this review by Jon Temple: https://t.co/At1Zs3sApC (covers politics of aid mostly from section 7 onwards)
I found David Graeber’s book on debt (Debt: The first 5,000 years), to be quite interesting and provocative. Parts of it could work in various classes listed above. His book on Democracy would offer interesting fodder for your discussions in Week 14, particularly as he relates the whole Occupy movement to a broader history of democracy.
RT @cblatts: Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/FCELPYitFk
RT @cblatts: Help me improve my “political economy of development” course? https://t.co/FCELPYitFk