Wedding Library
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Wedding Planning » General AAS » Development as Freedom  
Newsletter
Be notified of the latest releases.




We won't spam, share or barter your email address.
When is my Wedding - Wedding ticker - Countdown
Weddings By Adam - Wedding Planner - Personal Wedding Web Site The Knot
Target Club Wed - Wedding Registry
My Feed Page

wedding - Google News


Cape Girardeau County deputies inundated with calls about Jackson ...
Southeast Missourian, MO - 26 minutes ago
Michael J. Erzfeld, owner of the Custom Events wedding planning service, has been held in the Cape Girardeau County Jail since Nov. 26. ...
Bride-to-be Concerned after Wedding Planner Arrested for Felony ... KFVS
Jackson wedding planner arrested no suspicious of credit card fraud Southeast Missourian
all 5 news articles

5 Dec 2008


Calligraphylady.Com Featured in Beverly Clark Elite Wedding ...
PR.com (press release), NY - 29 minutes ago
Beverly Clark Elite Wedding Collection magazine features a bilingual destination wedding invitation created by calligrapher, Dayna Bischof, ...

5 Dec 2008


Students prepare to walk down aisle in mock wedding
Columbus Local News, OH - 37 minutes ago
By AMANDA RANALLI Big Walnut High School students will be learning what it means to say "I do" at the annual Mock Wedding Thursday Dec. 11. ...

5 Dec 2008


Reuters

Do GM and Chrysler Face a Shotgun Wedding?
MotorTrend Magazine - 8 hours ago
A shotgun wedding, if you will. Hot Rod Detroit Editor Bill McGuire and I watched the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearings on the ...
Is Chrysler Simply Looking for a Mate? That’s the Take of a ... New York Times
all 123 news articles

4 Dec 2008


Wedding: Sherrick, Davis
Daily Triplicate, CA - 13 hours ago
Wedding attendants included Amanda Wetherell as maid of honor and Kade Davis as best man. The ceremony was performed by Jacob Melby. ...

4 Dec 2008


Tampa Tribune

Crist says he has 'no jitters' about his wedding
WWSB ABC 7, FL - 19 hours ago
Charlie Crist, a week away from his wedding, says he has "no jitters" about the big day. In an interview published in Thursday's Tampa Tribune, the longtime ...
Crist Wedding Protest WMBB-TV
Crist Yet To Pick Up Wedding Bands Tampa Tribune
Why Impact Florida will demonstrate outside of Governor Crist’s ... Creative Loafing Tampa
all 19 news articles

4 Dec 2008
Information
[none entered]
Related Categories
• General AAS
Qualifying Textbooks
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
Books
• Development & Growth
Economics
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• Economic Conditions
Economics
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• Economic Policy & Development
Economics
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• Sustainable Development
Economics
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• General
Small Business & Entrepreneurship
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Small Business & Entrepreneurship
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• Policy & Current Events
Popular Economics
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• General
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• General AAS
Business & Investing
Subjects
Books
• Paperback
Binding (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Printed Books
Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
Subcategories
Paperback
Mass Market
Trade
Development as Freedom
Development as Freedom

 enlarge 
Author: Amartya Sen
Publisher: Anchor
Category: Book

List Price: $16.00
Buy New: $8.89
You Save: $7.11 (44%)



New (47) Used (31) from $7.60

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 49 reviews

Media: Paperback
Edition: Reprint
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 384
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.2 x 0.8

ISBN: 0385720270
Dewey Decimal Number: 330
EAN: 9780385720274

Publication Date: August 15, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: BRAND NEW

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 49
 1 2 3 4 5 6
... 10   NEXT »

5 out of 5 stars Great Book On Development Theory   September 29, 2008
Development as Freedom dives into the concept that both the result and mechanism of development is the growth of actual freedoms that people enjoy. It is no good to be rich slave.

The book dives headfirst into various development theories that both support and oppose this idea and Amartya Sen navigates them all with ease. He does a great job explaining varying economic theories to someone like me who has no economic background. If you are interested in international development work this is a must-read.



5 out of 5 stars The focus on freedom   September 2, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Amartya Sen's book answers a question that current development practices beg: Development for the sake of what? He provides grounding for his claim that freedom is both the process to vibrant development, and the goal.

Sen distinguishes his speculative new approach on economic development, from the most traditional:

* Approaches that focus their attention in achieving some levels in development's proxy variables - per capita income; income distribution and poverty levels or health, education, and safety indexes-
* Approaches based in levels of social satisfaction (levels of utility) based in individual/subjective "maps" of preferences.
* And finally, others approaches focused in the capacity of a particular community to achieve what Sen calls substantive freedom -centralized welfare approach- or procedural freedom -libertarian approach-.


Sen speculation seems to be relevant in many ways:

1. First, there is no doubt we are in a moment of enormous changes and mayor crises. Our mass production, oil based civilization is coming to an end with all the resistance, violence and waste it implies. Our national democracies -and its institutions such as legislation, justice, presidency and other more decentralized as media, lobbyist networks, or intelligence- have showed significant weaknesses in addressing global issues, and a systematic tendency to favor elites' games. There are mayor power shift opening the space for extended cultural re-valuations of values based in the emerging preeminence of China and India.
2. Second, there is an emerging new universe hold together by the internet and it capacity to sustain digital communities and digital worlds that have proved that is possible to create massive and sophisticated non-market value. These emerging universes embody a new culture of collaboration that is influencing and been influenced by the traditional forces of the molecular world. The technological force nurturing these changes has many resemblances with the historical opening produce by Gutenberg print press in 1450.
3. Third, there is some resignation with the current technocratic approaches to development such as those represented by Jeffrey Sachs.
4. Fourth, the collapse of the old order and the emergence of a new order may damage the possibilities to express the ethical ideals of the modern civilization -individual freedom- by enforcing control with new technologies and old institutions, or it may contribute to create a new Digital Renascence, or it may bring something new we are no able to see yet. A new understanding of freedom and human agency.
5. Putting at the center of the economic development conversation -as Sen does- the notion of development as expanding freedom, the notion of freedom itself, and the expansion of freedom to non-human life it seems to be a powerful tribute from the best of the past to the emerging and unbirth future. Sen is bringing a new invigorating perspective to an old conversation.



5 out of 5 stars Serious book on Development theory   May 3, 2008
If you only have a passing interest in development theory, you may find this book terribly boring and hard to read. Certainly, he doesn't go out of his way to be entertaining.

But if you are looking for real innovation in thought and discussion on this issue, then this book is a must read. It really added a new voice to the discussion of international development, and is oft cited and referred to in papers on the topic.

If you want to get up to speed on the modern debate on development theory, pick this up, read it, critique it in your own mind, really think about it, and move on.



4 out of 5 stars A great thesis on the real purpose of economics   April 20, 2008
This is a good book by great economist. But, if you are not an economist, like me, you may suffer a bit through the general discussion on economic philosophies through the first few chapters. Once into the later part of the book where modern case studies and data illustrate his point, I found his argument very deep and interesting.

Amartya Sen chooses to describe poverty not as a lack of resources, but as a lack of freedoms. Those freedoms include choosing where to live and work, with whom to associate, freedom to choose our leaders and decide the rules we live by, and many others. This key point is useful in that it does not focus solely on maximization of wealth as a way out of poverty. The problem with poverty is not lack of money, but that lack of money means that people are not free to make their own way in life. They may be trapped being at the mercy of nature, an opressive government, or an economy cripled by bad policy. The conclusion therefore, is that money alone cannot fix the real problem. Government reform, economic liberalization, and the general increase of personal freedoms is the true end we are striving for. Increasing incomes is one of several necessary steps to be accomplished and not an end in and of itself.

Sen's thesis in this work is often reduced by others to simple phrases like "democracies never have famines" or other simplistic phrases that are not entirely accurate with what Sen is actually arguing. You can find exceptions to some of these simple summaries, but the whole of Sen's argument remains very compelling describing the roles and responsibilities of individuals, institutions, and governments in achieving development and real progress.



3 out of 5 stars Such good ideas... such poor writing   March 9, 2008
Nobel Prize winner Amartya Sen strikes a beautiful balance here between socialists, who have their hearts in the right place but refuse to accept that the market is the best way to help people, and libertarians who believe in freedom but don't acknowledge that being poor limits your freedom as well. Hailing from India, Sen's focus is on development economics with a view on helping the world's poorest.

At the centerpiece of Sen's philosophy is freedom: He believe that freedom of action and life is the most fundamental human right. His philosophy comes very close to the "Four Freedoms" articulation of FDR in that he believes both in active freedoms (of labor and exchange, for example) as well as freedom from want, which can be brought about by state assistance. In addition, he also believes that giving people freedom is the best way to bring about progress: hence the title, development as freedom.

Some sections of the book read as economics, some read as political philosophy, and some read as a modern history. Sen explains why there has never been a famine in any functioning democracy, even though some of them have been among the poorest nations on Earth. He also advocates convincingly for the education and emancipation of women.

So far I have only good things to say about this book, but I didn't really enjoy reading it and only got through it because I was on a transatlantic flight. Why? Simply put, the writing in the book is painful. Not second-language painful: Sen clearly masters the English language, has an extensive vocabulary and is comfortable with his subject matter. The problem is that the writing is too obtuse: adverbs and obscure words abound, phrases drag on and it's sometimes difficult even for an absorbed reader to figure out what exactly is being said. One simple example: "But while the causal relation is indeed significant, the vindication of freedoms and rights provided by the causal linkage is over and above the directly constitutive role of these freedoms in development." Such sentences abound.

No argumentative book is perfect, and I sometime disagreed with Sen's arguments such as when he attacked utilitarianism. Overall, however, Sen has put together a coherent economic philosophy that focuses on results and seems to be in line with what works in the real world. If you can get through the heavy, opaque writing, then there are great insights to be gleaned from this book.


.
Powered by Weddings By Adam