Social Scientist. v 18, no. 200-01 (Jan-Feb 1990) p. 95.


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34. T.M. Shaw, Towards a political economy of the African crisis' in M. Clantz, (ed.) Drought and Hunger in Africa: Denying Famine a Future, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1987, p. 129.

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ALFRED M. JAEGER AND RAE3NCRA N. KANUNOO, Management in Developing Countries, Routledge, London & New York, 1990, £ 35 HB, 240 pp.

This volume provides the first comparative, critical assessment of how management theories and techniques used successfully in the West can be applied in developing countries.

MICHAEL UPTON & JOHN TO^ffi Does Aid Work in India? A Country Study of the Impact of Official Development Assistance, Routledge, London & New , York, 1990, £35, HB

How has India benefited from 30 years of official aid programmes? Michael Lipton and John Toye examine the impact of foreign aid to developing countries, focusing on India as an example of a very important recipient country.

MCHAMMBD AWOB, India And Southeast Asia Indian Perceptions And Policies, Routledge, London & New York, 1990, £ 25 HB

India has espoused the notion of building 'South-South' relations with other developing countries in recent years. The ASEAN countries, in particular, have come to play an important part in India's trade and policy considerations over the last decade. India and Southeast Asia provides a close contextual analysis of India's interests and perceptions in the region during its forty years of independence.

v.v. RAMANACHAN (Ed), Privatisation in Developing Countries, Routledge, London & New York, 1989, £ 40 HB, pp. XIV + 443

This book subjects the privatisation programmes of countries as diverse as India, Pakistan, Nigeria and Peru to critical scrutiny. It examines the role of international aid agencies, including the World Bank, in promoting these schemes and it details the positive impact of them, as well as their pitfalls.



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