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A Reply to Maxwell Cameron’s “A Review of David Lehmann’s After the Decolonial: Ethnicity, Gender and Social Justice in Latin America (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2022)”

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Notes

  1. The 1985 Bolivian stabilization plan might also qualify, but, unlike the Chilean case, it did not produce a sustained ‘model’. (Climenhage, 1999).

  2. A brief excursion into the website of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) at MIT led me to a paper entitled ‘Turning a Shove into a Nudge? A “Labeled Cash Transfer” for Education: Debunking the Stereotype of the Lazy Welfare Recipient: Evidence from Cash Transfer Programs Worldwide’ which cited an experiment in which the material incentive counted far less — if at all — compared to the simple ‘labelling’ of a cash transfer as an education support programme. https://www.povertyactionlab.org/evaluation/cash-transfers-education-morocco

  3. I am fully aware that this is an excessively simplified account of the Convention which sat for 1 year from July 2021.

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This reply refers to the comment available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10767-022-09436-9.

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Lehmann, D. A Reply to Maxwell Cameron’s “A Review of David Lehmann’s After the Decolonial: Ethnicity, Gender and Social Justice in Latin America (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2022)”. Int J Polit Cult Soc 36, 577–586 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10767-022-09437-8

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