Authors
Lyla Mehta
Publication date
2001/6/1
Journal
Human Organization
Volume
60
Issue
2
Pages
189-196
Publisher
Society for Applied Anthropology
Description
This paper critically examines the emerging knowledge agenda at the World Bank. From the publication of the World Development Report 1998-99 on "Knowledge for Development" to present discussions around the Global Development Gateway, the World Bank is attempting to carve a niche for itself as the "Knowledge Bank." In doing so it appears to have shifted from merely focusing on the transfer of capital. Instead, it seeks to be a leader in development expertise and knowledge transfers in international development. The paper examines the Bank's conception of knowledge, the rise of knowledge enterprises at the Bank, and the various tensions in its knowledge discourses. It argues that the Bank's knowledge agenda often tends to be centralized and absolutist and draws on economistic and technocratic models. These trends contribute to the emergence of a narrow knowledge agenda that both neglects …
Total citations
200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320248510613161414141112151213758134532