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[영국대학강의 제19편] 바스대학교 조 드바인 교수의 국제개발학 강의 2010.09.09
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영국대학강의 제19편! 바스대학교 조 드바인 교수의 국제개발학 강의
“Future Challenges of International Poverty Reduction - Putting People at the Centre”

일 시: 9월 29일 수요일 18:30~20:00

장 소: 주한영국문화원 이벤트 스페이스

사전예약: [사전예약 바로가기]

웹사이트: [웹사이트 바로가기]

강의 내용
In 2009, the Republic of Korea became an official member of OECD/DAC (development assistance committee). This signaled the Republic of Korea’s emergence as a significant international donor, and also confirmed the idea that the global aid architecture is rapidly changing. But what shape will the Republic of Korea’s international development profile take? Can it make a distinctive contribution to international development efforts?
This presentation will look at different approaches and understandings of development, and consider some of the key challenges and dilemmas that face the international aid community. It will propose the idea that there are no single or panacea solutions to poverty reduction; and that development interventions have much to learn from paying far more attention to the actual experience of poverty and the survival strategies that poor people devise to deal with their life circumstances. For countries like the Republic of Korea, which are still constructing their international development framework and priorities, this perspective opens challenging but potentially innovative opportunities which could allow it to shape future international development priorities.

교수 약력
Dr Joe Devine is a leading lecturer in the field of International Development at the University of Bath. He teaches a number of courses on the political and sociological dimensions of international development and social change, and has over twenty years experience of working and carrying out research in international development. He holds an MSc with Distinction in Development Studies from the London School of Economics, and a PhD from the University of Bath. His main research interests include wellbeing, livelihoods and poverty dynamics; international development policy and practice with particular interest in NGOs, civil society and collective action; religion and social change; governance; political ethnographies; coastal management; and research methodologies. Most of his research has been in South Asia, particularly Bangladesh.

University of Bath
Bath has been a leading UK centre for research and postgraduate study in international development studies for more than thirty years. The 2008 RAE places this department among the top four in the country for this subject area. Work in this field aims to contribute to combating global poverty and injustice by combining primary research into their causes with critical engagement in development practice and policy making. Ongoing research activities cover countries in Latin America, Sub- Saharan Africa, the Middle East, South and South East Asia. Themes include: poverty and policy; wellbeing and collective action; markets and microfinance; gender, youth and childhood; religion and identity; conflict and natural resources.