The experience accumulated in the wake of more than two decades
of sustained effort to promote growth and change in the low-income
countries presents a rich field for scholarly inquiry and new
insights into the development process. The success and failures of
such projects, the new skills and attitudes they impart, and the
internal tensions they sometimes generate obviously have an
important bearing on the next stages of a county's development
effort. Yet little has become known about these truly formative
experiences which are due to the behavior --and misbehavior --of
development projects. In this recent volume, Professor Albert O.
Hirschman turns his attention to the ways in which decision making
is molded, activated, or hampered by the specific nature of the
project that is undertaken; for example, the establishment and
operation of a pulp and paper mill in east Pakistan, an irrigation
project in Peru, railway expansion in Nigeria, and other
development undertakings. In some parts of the present inquiry
Hirschman elaborates on his earlier writings in this series; and
occasionally, he qualifies or modifies his previous conclusions;
the bulk of the study explores new territory.
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