AbstractsAnthropology

Conceptions of poverty and development in a Malawian village setting

by Pétur. Waldorff




Institution: McGill University
Department: Department of Anthropology.
Degree: MA
Year: 2006
Keywords: Agricultural development projects  – Malawi.; Poverty  – Malawi.; Malawi  – Economic conditions.
Record ID: 1774648
Full text PDF: http://digitool.library.mcgill.ca/thesisfile99612.pdf


Abstract

This thesis is the result of ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Phalombe District in Malawi, Southern Africa, where I studied agricultural development projects in the village of Kachala. The focus of this investigation is on people's perceptions and ideas of development co-operation and the meanings of development and poverty in general. Perceptions of development and poverty among villagers in Kachala are compared to those of development agents working for development organizations in the area. These perceptions are also compared to the definitions of development and poverty found throughout development literature. This research demonstrates - through examples from Phalombe District and elsewhere - how notions of development are relative, diverse and context-specific, and therefore not static and universally applicable. Finally, participatory development ideals and the structurally unequal donor-recipient relationships, at the core of the current development system, are discussed. This thesis illustrates how the common portrayal of development as an oppressive, disempowering industry, characterized by top-down interventions, does not always apply.