Overview
- Editors:
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Philip Fountain
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Religion and Globalization Cluster, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore
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Robin Bush
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Research Triangle International, Indonesia
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R. Michael Feener
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Asia Research Institute, Singapore
National University of Singapore, Singapore
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About this book
This volume brings emerging research on religion and development into conversation with politics. Deploying innovative conceptual frameworks, and drawing on empirical research from across contemporary Asia, this collection makes an incisive contribution to the analysis of aid and development processes.
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Table of contents (12 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xiii
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- Robin Bush, Philip Fountain, R. Michael Feener
Pages 1-9
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- Philip Fountain, Robin Bush, R. Michael Feener
Pages 11-34
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- R. Michael Feener, Philip Fountain, Robin Bush
Pages 243-245
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Back Matter
Pages 247-253
Reviews
“The contents of this book are very relevant for scholars in several fields, especially as a tool for advancing interdisciplinary research on the topics at hand. … This book is well-organized and touches on a wide range of subjects related to the central theme. … this book will serve as an excellent resource for researchers striving to construct new or rethought forms of development policy and application.” (Peter D. A. Wood, Progress in Development Studies, Vol. 16 (3), 2016)
"Originating from a conference hosted by an academic powerhouse, the Asia Research Institute (ASI), National University of Singapore, Religion and the Politics of Development is much more coherent than most edited compilations. It combines a sophisticated, questioning editorial vision with ethnographic richness, and substantially expands the existing body of comparative research literature on this topic. The quasi-religious character of supposedly secular movements and institutions is thoughtfully exposed, including those that sacralize 'development', while pro-poor initiatives are shown to be dangerously narrow-minded when they are grounded in a dismissive approach to religion. The reader is left in no doubt about the deficiencies of aid and welfare provision in all the social contexts considered by the twelve contributors, but is reminded that world politics would be in an even worse state without the 'will to improve'." - Jonathan Benthall, University College London, UK
Editors and Affiliations
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Religion and Globalization Cluster, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Philip Fountain
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Research Triangle International, Indonesia
Robin Bush
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Asia Research Institute, Singapore
R. Michael Feener
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National University of Singapore, Singapore
R. Michael Feener
About the editors
Melissa L. Caldwell, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA Nalika Gajaweera, University of Southern California, USA Kikue Hamayotsu, Northern Illinois University, USA Zoltan Pall, National University of Singapore, Singapore Emma Tomalin, University of Leeds, UK Oscar Salemink, University of Copenhagen, Denmark R. Santhosh , Indian Institute of Technology Madras, India Chika Watanabe, University of Manchester, UK Wu Keping, National University of Singapore, Singapore