units
ATS3378
Faculty of Arts
This unit entry is for students who completed this unit in 2012 only. For students planning to study the unit, please refer to the unit indexes in the the current edition of the Handbook. If you have any queries contact the managing faculty for your course or area of study.
Refer to the specific census and withdrawal dates for the semester(s) in which this unit is offered, or view unit timetables.
Level | Undergraduate |
Faculty | Faculty of Arts |
Offered | Not offered in 2012 |
Coordinator(s) | Max Richter |
Notes
Previously coded ANY3480
This unit takes an anthropological approach to critiquing international development and understanding the notion of the 'third world'. It explores how ethnography can improve our understanding of the development process, relationships between the 'north' and 'south' and the place of the 'third world' in contemporary globalisation. The unit examines the ways anthropologists theorise social and economic patterns of change; how development policy is imagined, produced, and received (or resisted) across multiple cultural contexts; and how development (and therefore the third world) is imagined and defined through specific case studies of approaches, institutions and practitioners in the field.
Students can expect to develop:
Written work (3500 Words): 80%
Seminar participation/presentations: 20%
2 hours (1 x 2 hour seminar) per week
International studies
Anthropology
Appropriate first-year ANY sequence or by permission
COS3430