View Shopping Basket | My Account
Visit |
 
  Home Find a Book How to Order For Authors About Us Contact Us Help
 
 
 Back to Main Book Details    Back to Search Results
 
   
Institutions And Development

Mary M. Shirley, President, The Ronald Coase Institute, US
‘Mary Shirley’s fascinating and thought-provoking book on institutions and development takes issue with the way in which the international community has come to deal with institutions and governance. . . This book has been written by an author who combines a unique theoretical and empirical knowledge of her subject. . . The book clearly benefits both from her rich empirical experience with aid and development, and from her in-depth theoretical and analytical knowledge about institutions and institutional change. The book starts with a preface, which provides a useful and succinct summary of the main arguments developed in the volume. . . the book is very well written and full of valuable and thought-provoking insights on institutional change and development. . . Beyond any doubt, this book is essential reading for anyone interested in development, academics and practitioners alike.’
– Regina Birner, Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture

‘Institutions and Development is a landmark contribution to our understanding of economic development. It combines the author’s extensive experience with a thorough knowledge of the literature to provide an indispensable guide to improving economic performance in underdeveloped countries.’
– Douglass C. North, Washington University in St. Louis, US and Nobel Laureate

A landmark contribution to our understanding of economic development.



Both economic research and the history of foreign aid suggest that the largest barriers to development arise from a society’s institutions – its norms and rules. The author draws on 35 years experience to explain how institutions drive economic development. She goes beyond the abstractions usually used to define institutions, providing numerous examples to illustrate the complex, interlocking, and persistent nature of real world rules and norms. This significant book argues that fundamental changes in deeply rooted institutions do not happen because of outsiders’ money, advice, pressures, or even physical force; which explains why foreign aid has not, and can not, improve institutions. The impetus for changing institutions must come from within a society, and the author shows how groups of local scholars contribute to institutional change and development when the political opportunity presents itself.

Providing an overview of how market supporting institutions evolved in Europe and why these institutions are weak or absent in most countries of the world, this book will be of interest to a wide audience of aid and development policymakers, academics, and students of economics, political science, management, and law.
2008 240 pp Hardback 978 1 84542 968 3 £ 59.95 on-line discount £ 53.96
2010 240 pp Paperback 978 1 84980 161 4 £ 19.95 on-line discount £ 15.96
    This book is also available as an ebook 978 1 84844 399 0
Qty
 Back to Main Book Details    Back to Search Results
Economics cat
Ebook package
ALAI
 
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd., The Lypiatts, 15 Lansdown Road, Cheltenham, Glos, GL50 2JA
Copyright © 2005 Edward Elgar Publishing. All rights reserved Privacy Policy Site maintenance by EEP
Main Edward Elgar Website