External and internal efforts to help developing countries
achieve growth and economic stability, based on Western models,
have resulted in frustration at best and in the creation of serious
new problems without the resolution of existing ones at worst.
Professor Gharajedaghi contends that this general failure stems not
from a lack of expertise but from a fundamental misconception of
the development process. Challenging common assumptions about the
nature of national development planning, he proposes practical new
approaches aimed at fostering national and local planning
initiatives rather than continued reliance on external and
traditional development models. This study is the product of more
than 25 years of research and experience in planning in developing
nations. It presents a flexible theoretical framework that reflects
philosophical, methodological, and conceptual aspects of planning
and it may be readily adapted to a full range of development
situations.
General
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