Thinking Small

Thinking Small The United States and the Lure of Community Development

Paperback (23 Feb 2018)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Winner of the Merle Curti Award in Intellectual History, Organization of American Historians
Co-Winner of the Society for U.S. Intellectual History Book Award

Thinking Small tells the story of how the United States sought to rescue the world from poverty through small-scale, community-based approaches. And it also sounds a warning: such strategies, now again in vogue, have been tried before, with often disastrous consequences.

"Unfortunately, far from eliminating deprivation and attacking the social status quo, bottom-up community development projects often reinforced them…This is a history with real stakes. If that prior campaign's record is as checkered as Thinking Small argues, then its intellectual descendants must do some serious rethinking… How might those in twenty-first-century development and anti-poverty work forge a better path? They can start by reading Thinking Small."
-Merlin Chowkwanyun, Boston Review

"As the historian Daniel Immerwahr demonstrates brilliantly in Thinking Small, the history of development has seen constant experimentation with community-based and participatory approaches to economic and social improvement…Immerwahr's account of these failures should give pause to those who insist that going small is always better than going big."
-Jamie Martin, The Nation

Book information

ISBN: 9780674984127
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Imprint: Harvard University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 307.140973
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 272
Weight: 398g
Height: 156mm
Width: 235mm
Spine width: 19mm