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Public Events 2013

Mireye-Solis-1

Wednesday 4 December 2013, 6-7.30pm

Efficiency, Legitimacy and Political Expediency: Japan's trade governance dilemmas

New Theatre, East Building

Speaker: Dr Mireya Solis

Chair: Professor Ken Shadlen, LSE

Trade policy aims to satisfy three key criteria: efficiency, legitimacy and political expediency. As Japan embarks on a trade policy of unprecedented ambition through Free Trade Agreement negotiations with the European Union and participation in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, it faces acute trade dilemmas.

About the speaker

Mireya Solis is the Philip Knight Chair in Japan Studies and senior fellow at the Brookings Center for Northeast Asian Policy Studies.

Suggested hashtag for this event for Twitter users: #LSEJapan

 
Barbara-Harriss-White

Friday 29 November 2013, 7-8pm

Comparisons Are Odious! India and China: Economy, Society and Environment

Wolfson Theatre, New Academic Building

Speaker: Professor Barbara Harriss-White

This year's BASAS annual lecture will be delivered by Professor Barbara Harriss-White of the University of Oxford. In her presentation she will focus on the similarities and differences between the Indian and Chinese economy, society and environment. She will focus on the less well appreciated similarities between the two countries. This lecture draws on extensive research produced for the book: China-India: pathways of economic and social development, edited by Delia Davin and Barbara Harriss-White which is about to be published by OUP for the British Academy.

The lecture was followed by a reception at 8pm kindly sponsored by the LSE’s newly announced South Asia Centre.

 

About the speaker

Professor Barbara Harriss-White is the director of Wolfson College’s South Asia Research Cluster and of Area Studies Research Project on the Materiality of India’s Informal Economy at Oxford University. She was the founder-director of Oxford University’s Contemporary South Asian Studies Programme in the School of Area Studies and organiser of the world’s first MSc in Contemporary India. She has written, edited or co-edited and published 40 books and major reports, published over 200 scholarly papers and chapters and over 60 working papers. Her book Rural Commercial Capital won the Edgar Graham prize. She works on India’s political economy, in particular food and energy, and aspects of deprivation – all through field research. She is emeritus professor of development studies, emeritus fellow of Wolfson College, Oxford, and a professorial research associate at SOAS.

 
Mark-Goldring-Oxfam

Thursday 28 November 2013, 6.30-8pm

Approaches to Eradicate Poverty Over the Next Generation

Old Theatre, Old Building

Speaker: Mark Goldring

Chair: Professor James Putzel, LSE

About the speaker

Mark Goldring is chief executive of Oxfam GB and has decades of experience within international development, including as chief executive of VSO and chief executive of Mencap, the UK’s leading disability charity.

Suggested Twitter hashtag: #LSEOxfam

 
Helene D. Gayle

Thursday 31 October 2013, 6.30-8pm

Private Sector Approaches to Sustainable, Long-Term Economic Development

Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House

Speaker: Dr Helene Gayle

Chair: Professor E A Brett, LSE

New approaches to address extreme poverty are emerging that involve greater private sector engagement. Traditional poverty-fighting efforts are being combined with new, innovative business models aiming for social impact—providing long-term economic growth as well as greater social empowerment. Dr Gayle will discuss the variety of ways in which an NGO can engage with a broader range of partners toward improving the lives of poor people around the world.

About the speaker

Helene D Gayle is president and CEO of CARE USA, a leading international humanitarian organisation.

Suggested Twitter hashtag: #LSECARE

 
ErtharinCousin_62_86

Tuesday 17 September 2013, 6.30-8pm

Delivering Food Assistance in a Shrinking Humanitarian Space

Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House

Speaker: Ertharin Cousin

Chair: Professor Stuart Gordon, LSE

Conflict and insecurity present a growing challenge to humanitarian agencies as they strive to reach those in need of food assistance. Access is vital if lives are going to be saved and children are to be given the nutritional support they need to thrive. In a world of increasingly complex emergencies, shifting allegiances and fluid frontlines, there is an even greater risk that some communities may be left beyond the reach of the agencies that are there to help.

About the speaker

Ertharin Cousin is the executive director of the United Nations World Food Programme, the world’s largest humanitarian organisation. Last year, WFP provided food assistance to more than 97 million people in 80 countries. Ertharin is an exceptional advocate for improving the lives of hungry people worldwide, and travels extensively to raise awareness of food insecurity and chronic malnutrition.

Suggested Twitter hashtag: #LSEWFP

 
jsrp-2-july-event

Tuesday 2 July 2013, 10am-5.30pm

Evidence and Power Conference at LSE

The Justice and Security Research Programme and The Asia Foundation

Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House

Can evidence really drive development policy, or do power and politics always trump in the end?Join experts from the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID), The Asia Foundation (TAF), ActionAid, the London School of Economics (LSE), Tufts University, Overseas Development Institute (ODI) and the University of Manchester for a day of debate, discussion and workshops on the evolving and contested role of evidence in development policy.

This one-day conference is structured as a solution-oriented conversation between researchers, practitioners and policymakers working at the intersection of evidence and policy.  We’ll discuss examples from the ongoing research collaboration between the LSE’s Justice and Security Research Programme and The Asia Foundation, examining how TAF uses Theory of Change as a planning tool and entry point for better use of evidence in their work in Nepal, Sri Lanka, Philippines,  Timor-Leste and beyond.

 
Ian Shapiro

Thursday 27 June 2013, 2-3:30pm

Luck, Leadership, and Legitimacy in Transitions to Democracy: Lessons from South Africa and the Middle East 

Graham Wallace Room (5th Floor, Old Building)

Speaker: Professor Ian Shapiro

Chair:  Mayling Birney, LSE

 

Co-organised by the Department of International Development and the Department of Government Comparative Politics and Political Theory Group.

 
Amartya Sen

Wednesday 26 June 2013, 6.30-8pm

An Uncertain Glory: the economic and social condition of modern India 

Asia Research Centre and Department of International Development public lecture

Old Theatre, Old Building

Speaker: Professor Amartya Sen

Chair: Professor Craig Calhoun 

When India became independent in 1947 after two centuries of colonial subjugation, it immediately adopted a firmly democratic political system, with multiple parties, freedom of speech and extensive political rights. The famines that had been so common in the colonial era disappeared, and steady economic growth replaced the almost complete stagnation characteristic of the long rule of the Raj. The growth of the Indian economy, which has quickened over the last three decades, became the second fastest in the world. Despite a recent dip, it is still one of the highest among nations.

Maintaining rapid as well as environmentally sustainable growth remains an important and achieveable goal for India. In this lecture, based on his new book written with Professor Jean Drèze, An Uncertain Glory|, Sen will argue that the country's main problems lie elsewhere, particularly in the lack of attention that is paid to the essential needs of the people, especially the poor. One of the biggest failures has been the very inadequate use of the public resources generated by economic growth to expand India's lagging physical and social infrastructure (in sharp contrast, for example, to what China has done): there is a continued inadequacy both of social services such as schooling, medical care and immunization, and of physical services such as the provision of safe water, electricity, drainage and sanitation. Even as India has overtaken other countries in its rate of growth, because of these inadequacies it has, the book shows, fallen behind many of the same countries - often very poor ones - in quality of life.

Because of the importance of democracy in India, addressing these failures will require not only significant policy rethinking by the government, but also a better public understanding of the abysmal extent of social and economic deprivations. The deep inequalities in Indian society tend to constrict public discussion in India's vibrant media to the lives and concerns of the relatively affluent. Dreze and Sen argue that if there is to be more effective democratic practice, there has to be a clearer understanding of the severity of human deprivations in India.

About the speaker

Amartya Sen is Lamont University Professor, professor of Philosophy and professor of Economics, at Harvard University. He is an honorary fellow of LSE. Amartya won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1998 and was master of Trinity College, Cambridge, 1998-2004. His many books include Development as Freedom, Rationality and Freedom, The Argumentative Indian, Identity and Violence and The Idea of Justice.

 
chio

Tuesday, June 4th, 4.00-6.00pm

Film Screening

Nong Jia Le - Peasant Family Happiness

Thai Theatre, New Academic Building, LSE

The film is followed by a Q&A session with filmmaker Jenny Chio

"Nong Jia Le - Peasant Family Happiness" depicts the everyday experience of 'doing tourism' in two rural, ethnic tourism destinations in Guizhou and Guangxi provinces, China. Focusing on the perspectives of village residents, this film portrays how modern, rural Chinese negotiate between the day-to-day consequences of tourist arrivals in their home villages and ideal projections of who they are and what their lives can achieve through tourism development.

Jenny Chio is Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Emory University. Her scholarly research focuses on rural social change in China, ethnic identity, tourism and migration, and documentary studies. She is also an ethnographic filmmaker and is working in various collaborative documentary film projects.

This is a joint event organised by the LSE's Department of International Development and the Department of Anthropology.

 
Amartya Sen

Wednesday 29 May 2013, 6.30-8pm

Reflections on a Changing World: 1950-2050

The Amartya Sen Lecture at LSE

Old Theatre, Old Building

Speaker: Sir James Wolfensohn

Discussant: Professor Amartya Sen

James Wolfensohn was the ninth president of the World Bank.

 
HaJoon_62_86

Wednesday 15 May 2013, 6.30pm-8pm

Does Market-led Development Have a Future?

Old Theatre, Old Building

Speakers: Dr Ha-Joon Chang, Reader in the Political Economy of Development, Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge

Professor Danny Quah, Kuwait Professor of Economics and International Development, LSE

Chair: Dr Jean-Paul Faguet, Reader in the Political Economy of Development, LSE

The Department of International Development’s third annual Development Debate will consider the topic “Does market-led development have a future?”.  The debate is organized by the Development Management Programme, and features two world authorities on economic growth and development, Professor Danny Quah of the LSE, and Dr Ha-Joon Chang of Cambridge.

About the speaker

Ha-Joon Chang is one of the leading heterodox economists and institutional economists specialising in development economics. Currently Reader in the Political Economy of Development at the University of Cambridge, Chang is the author of several best-selling books, most notably Kicking Away the Ladder: Development Strategy in Historical Perspective (2002) and 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism (2010).  He has served as a consultant to the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and the European Investment Bank as well as to Oxfam and various United Nations agencies. He is also a fellow at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C.

 
WBank_62_86

Tuesday 19 March 2013, 6.30-8pm

Localizing Development: Does Participation Work?

New Theatre, East Building

Speakers: Ghazala Mansuri, Vijayendra Rao

Discussant: David Mosse

Chair: Jean-Paul Faguet

Localizing Development: Does Participation Work?, a new Policy Research Report analysing participatory development efforts, shows that such projects often fail to be sensitive to complex contexts - including social, political, historical and geographical realities - and fall short in terms of monitoring and evaluation systems, which hampers learning. Citing numerous examples, the authors demonstrate that participatory projects are not a substitute for weak states, but instead require strong central support to be effective.

About the speakers

Ghazala Mansuri is lead economist in the World Bank's Poverty Reduction and Equity Group.

Vijayendra Rao is lead economist in the World Bank's Development Research Group.

David Mosse is Professor of Social Anthropology in the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at the School of Oriental and African Studies.

Jean-Paul Faguet is a Reader in the Political Economy at the LSE and the current Chair of the Decentralization Task Force, part of Joseph Stiglitz's Initiative for Policy Dialogue at Columbia University.  

This event is free and open to all with no ticket required. Entry is on a first come, first served basis. For any queries contact Mazida Khatun by phone on 020 7852 3665 or via email at mazida.khatun@theigc.org.

 
PaulCollier_62_86

Tuesday 5 March 2013, 6.30-8pm

Reversing the Resource Curse: How to Harness Natural Resource Wealth for Accelerated Development

LSESU DESTIN Society Event

New Theatre, East Building

Speaker: Paul Collier

Chair: Dr Jean-Paul Faguet, International Development, LSE

Paul Collier is Professor of Economics and Public Policy at Oxford University and author of The Bottom Billion and Plundered Planet: How to Reconcile Prosperity with Nature.

 
Helmut Reisen

Tuesday 5 March 2013, 6.30-8pm

Re-Measuring the World: China's Global Development Impact

NAB 1.04

Speaker: Dr. Helmut Reisen, Chair: Prof. Danny Quah

 
Thomas Bossert

Friday 1 March 2013, 4-6pm

Decentralization of Health: Recent Studies of Decision Space, Capacities and Accountability

TW1 1.02

Speaker: Thomas Bossert, Ph.D. Harvard School of Public Health

Chair: Dr Jean-Paul Faguet, International Development, LSE

 
Book cover

Monday 28 January 2013, 6.30-8pm

Zimbabwe Takes Back its Land

New Theatre, East Building

A discussion with the authors of the new book, Zimbabwe Takes Back its Land which offers a nuanced assessment of land reform, countering the dominant media narratives of oppression and economic stagnation in Zimbabwe.

About the speakers

Joseph Hanlon is a visiting senior fellow at the LSE and an honorary research fellow at the University of Manchester.

Jeanette Manjengwa is deputy director of the Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Zimbabwe, Harare.

Teresa Smart is a visiting fellow at the Institute of Education, University of London.

Suggested Twitter hashtag: #LSEZimbabwe

 
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