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"A masterful synthesis of
the current issues of world poverty and development, a blistering indictment
of our failure to get to grips with them, and an incisive exploration
of what can be done to begin to bring about real change." "The author is surely right
on three main issues that he raises in this book. Firstly, that there
are no universal solutions to the issues of fighting world poverty; all
problems are local and solutions must therefore be local, backed by appropriate
international support. "An important contribution
to the aid and development debate. Full of fascinating information and
insights. It should make all participants in the debate sit up and think."
"I think the setting out of
the problem is masterly. The prose is powerful, concise, clear. [The book]
tackles complicated issues with great simplicity and force. I am not sure
that I can agree with [its] conclusions, for how can one do anything without
having governing elites on side? Will they not find new ways of stealing
from or suppressing the small communities that you want to encourage?
It seems to me that we need a much tougher international regime (I have
no idea how it could be done) that (a) forces the rich world to abandon
its wicked subsidisations and (b) allows the poor world--Africa mostly--some
protectionism, but on condition of closely watched and effectively sanctioned
improvements in governance. A hopeless proposition of course. So I end
rather depressed, but you have outlined some very practical steps that
people of good will, and there are millions of them, could take to start
improving the situation in the immediate future." "A
personal inquiry into world poverty by someone of unusually wide experience
with stimulating ideas for a less bleak future." "It
is difficult to agree with the whole of the book's thesis. Things are
getting better in Africa and all change is slow. But at the same time
the author does understand poverty at the level where it matters and many
of his comments and deductions are correct both in theory and in practice.
To me the book raises the basic questions that need urgently to be addressed;
how will African leaders confront the growing challenges? how will the
leaders of the rich world face up to the harm that has been caused to
many fragile economies in the past and continues to this day? I would
strongly recommend the book as essential readings for the activists who
supported the MAKE POVERTY HISTORY campaign in 2005."
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