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The invention of a European Developm...
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France
The invention of a European Development Aid Bureaucracy[electronic resource] :recycling empire /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
[NT 15000414]:
338.914
Title/Author:
The invention of a European Development Aid Bureaucracy : recycling empire // Veronique Dimier.
Author:
Dimier, Veronique.
Published:
Basingstoke : : Palgrave Macmillan :, 2014.
Description:
256 p.
Notes:
Electronic book text.
Subject:
Economic assistance, European - History - Africa.
Subject:
Postcolonialism - Africa.
Subject:
Aid & relief programmes - EU (European Union).
Subject:
Development studies - EU (European Union).
Subject:
Society.
Subject:
France - Colonies - Africa.
ISBN:
1137318279 (electronic bk.) :
ISBN:
9780230300002
ISBN:
9781137318275 (electronic bk.) :
[NT 15000228]:
1. Introduction 2. Grandeurs et Servitudes Europeennes en Afrique 3. Brussels or the last French Colony: French Colonial Administrators' Leadership in Designing DG8 4. Du Bon Usage de la Tournee: DG8's Quest for Legitimacy 5. Flag Dictatorship within the European Commission? The Construction of DG8's Autonomy 6. Fachoda Revisited: the Effects of the first EEC Enlargement on DG8 7. EEC Development Policy: a Sedimentation of Empire? 8. In the Name of Efficiency 9. From Indirect to Direct Rule: Towards Normative Power Europe? 10. 'Adieu les Artistes, Here are the Managers' 11. EEC Bureaucracy in Action 12. Conclusion.
[NT 15000229]:
A comprehensive analysis of how European development policy was shaped, this book explores the role of former colonial officials in shaping the policy agenda and explores this example of 'recycled empire.' Dimier argues that this post-colonial agenda only changed as a result of pressure from the OECD and World Bank in the 1980s and 1990s.
Online resource:
Online journal 'available contents' page
The invention of a European Development Aid Bureaucracy[electronic resource] :recycling empire /
Dimier, Veronique.
The invention of a European Development Aid Bureaucracy
recycling empire /[electronic resource] :Veronique Dimier. - 1st ed. - Basingstoke :Palgrave Macmillan :2014. - 256 p. - Palgrave studies in European Union politics.
Electronic book text.
1. Introduction 2. Grandeurs et Servitudes Europeennes en Afrique 3. Brussels or the last French Colony: French Colonial Administrators' Leadership in Designing DG8 4. Du Bon Usage de la Tournee: DG8's Quest for Legitimacy 5. Flag Dictatorship within the European Commission? The Construction of DG8's Autonomy 6. Fachoda Revisited: the Effects of the first EEC Enlargement on DG8 7. EEC Development Policy: a Sedimentation of Empire? 8. In the Name of Efficiency 9. From Indirect to Direct Rule: Towards Normative Power Europe? 10. 'Adieu les Artistes, Here are the Managers' 11. EEC Bureaucracy in Action 12. Conclusion.
Document
A comprehensive analysis of how European development policy was shaped, this book explores the role of former colonial officials in shaping the policy agenda and explores this example of 'recycled empire.' Dimier argues that this post-colonial agenda only changed as a result of pressure from the OECD and World Bank in the 1980s and 1990s.Through in-depth analysis of European development policy over the past thirty fifty years, this book outlines the significant influence that former French colonial officials had in designing and implementing development aid programmes in Africa and how the way their influence has continued to impact upon EEC development policy in Africa. The study shows that the Directorate General 8 of the European Commission (DG8), the institution responsible for this policy, was well adapted to dealing with emergent African administrations, and was modelled on the neo-patrimonial system of DG8's African clients. Within this system, authority and legitimacy were based on mutual trust and obligations, personal and affective ties, political compromise, permanent exception to the rule, the core of what was termed 'Indirect Rule' during colonial times. It also examines how this administrative system evolved following successive EEC enlargements and the extent to which this evolution necessitated an incremental process towards bureaucratization, for example, the rationalization of procedures and the depersonalization of practices.
PDF.
Veronique Dimier is Associate Professor in Political Science at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium. She was previously a researcher at St Antony's College, University of Oxford, and Senior Lecturer at the European Institute of Public Administration, Maastricht.
ISBN: 1137318279 (electronic bk.) :£65.00Subjects--Topical Terms:
579300
Economic assistance, European
--History--Africa.Subjects--Geographical Terms:
578685
France
--Colonies--Africa.
LC Class. No.: HC240.25.A35 / D58 2014
Dewey Class. No.: 338.914
The invention of a European Development Aid Bureaucracy[electronic resource] :recycling empire /
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1. Introduction 2. Grandeurs et Servitudes Europeennes en Afrique 3. Brussels or the last French Colony: French Colonial Administrators' Leadership in Designing DG8 4. Du Bon Usage de la Tournee: DG8's Quest for Legitimacy 5. Flag Dictatorship within the European Commission? The Construction of DG8's Autonomy 6. Fachoda Revisited: the Effects of the first EEC Enlargement on DG8 7. EEC Development Policy: a Sedimentation of Empire? 8. In the Name of Efficiency 9. From Indirect to Direct Rule: Towards Normative Power Europe? 10. 'Adieu les Artistes, Here are the Managers' 11. EEC Bureaucracy in Action 12. Conclusion.
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A comprehensive analysis of how European development policy was shaped, this book explores the role of former colonial officials in shaping the policy agenda and explores this example of 'recycled empire.' Dimier argues that this post-colonial agenda only changed as a result of pressure from the OECD and World Bank in the 1980s and 1990s.
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Through in-depth analysis of European development policy over the past thirty fifty years, this book outlines the significant influence that former French colonial officials had in designing and implementing development aid programmes in Africa and how the way their influence has continued to impact upon EEC development policy in Africa. The study shows that the Directorate General 8 of the European Commission (DG8), the institution responsible for this policy, was well adapted to dealing with emergent African administrations, and was modelled on the neo-patrimonial system of DG8's African clients. Within this system, authority and legitimacy were based on mutual trust and obligations, personal and affective ties, political compromise, permanent exception to the rule, the core of what was termed 'Indirect Rule' during colonial times. It also examines how this administrative system evolved following successive EEC enlargements and the extent to which this evolution necessitated an incremental process towards bureaucratization, for example, the rationalization of procedures and the depersonalization of practices.
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Recycling Empire offers a fascinating account of the construction of a development bureaucracy within the European Commission. Drawing on archival sources and interviews with key figures in the history of EU development policy, the book a scholarly yet readable history of the evolution of EU development policy. - Michelle Cini, Professor of European Politics, School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies (SPAIS), University of Bristol, UK.
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Veronique Dimier is Associate Professor in Political Science at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium. She was previously a researcher at St Antony's College, University of Oxford, and Senior Lecturer at the European Institute of Public Administration, Maastricht.
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http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137318275
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