Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/68652
Title: The State and Development: The Paradox of Developmental States
Authors: Patrick Strefford
Authors: Patrick Strefford
Keywords: The State;International development;Capacity;freedom;Developmental state
Issue Date: 2018
Publisher: Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, Chiang Mai University
Citation: ASR: Chiang Mai University.Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities 5,2 (July-Dec 2018), p.129-151
Abstract: Since the Industrial Revolution, human well-being has been dramatically improved. There are, needless to say, significant and serious gaps in this improvement, if we look globally. But, on balance and using a large number of measures, we must conclude that international development over the last 200-plus years has been phenomenal. This progress has resulted from the individual and collective efforts of humans- as embodied in the private sector. However, institutions, and especially those that are manifested as the state, facilitate the efforts of the private sector. It is an axiom that public institutions are necessary for civilization. In a society that has successfully developed, these public institutions must be pro-development, and can hence be referred to as a developmental state. Importantly, these developmental states expand their activities over time, and inevitably become international developmental states. Paradoxically, those very same public institutions that enable progress have, always and everywhere, the propensity to behave in ways contrary to facilitating progress, becoming anti-developmental. This paper outlines first the successes of the developmental states, and then the inescapable proclivity for developmental states to become anti-developmental, highlighting the inevitable consequential dilemma of how to pursue and achieve the following twin goals: filling in the gaps of global development, and, correcting the tendency for developmental states to become anti-developmental.
Description: ASR (Asian Social Research) was first launched in 2014 by Chiang Mai University. However, it has a longer history, with its genesis in 2002 as part of Chiang Mai University Journal.This journal was split into two in 2007, with the formation of ASR's predecessor, the Chiang Mai University Journal of social Sciences and Humanities, which was later restyled as ASR in 2014, and began publishing online in 2015.
URI: http://cmuj.cmu.ac.th/uploads/asr_journal_list_index/582423646.pdf
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/68652
ISSN: 2465-4329
Appears in Collections:CMUL: Journal Articles

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