Journal Article

30

Nationalising The Anti-Poverty Agenda?

Published on 5 May 1999

The New Poverty Agenda, along with many other neo-liberal orthodoxies of the 1980s and early 1990s is withering away as rapid political and ideological shifts take place at the global level and within the domain of international development policy. Whilst this IDS Bulletin celebrates that fact, it also urges caution.

First, because these are changes in attitude, not a great breakthrough in actually doing anything to reduce poverty. Second, because neo-liberalism will not disappear over night but will remain influential for years to come. Third, the IDS Bulletin questions whether an internationally-defined anti-poverty agenda is really a good thing and will not serve to undermine rather than enhance anti-poverty efforts. It queries whether in fact we should seek to nationalise rather than internationalise the anti-poverty agenda in poor countries.

Editors

Mick Moore

Professorial Fellow

Stephen Devereux

Research Fellow

Publication details

published by
IDS
authors
Devereux, S. and Moore, M.
editors
Stephen Devereux and Mick Moore
journal
IDS Bulletin, volume 30, issue 2
isbn
0265 5012

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