On 16 November, OU Economics had the honour to host Pritish Behuria (minutes 6.15-22.50), Lebohang Liepollo Pheko (minutes 22.55-36.10) and Jennifer Larbie (36.15-50.20) who, drawing from their recent publication, discuss the role of critical development policies and emergent theoretical paradigms. The seminar was chaired by Giles Mohan (OU DPP) who acted as discussant (minutes 50:20-58:40). The three presentations and the intervention by the discussant was followed by Q&A (minute 58.30 till end).
The field of Development Studies has always been contested by different visions ranging from those that conceive it as project of the global North developing the South to those that view it as a project of Southern emancipation from colonial subordination and a means to structural transformation. The COVID-19 pandemic once again motivated calls for the field of development studies to be recast.
Drawing from recent publications below, the seminar explores the role of critical development policies, and emergent theoretical paradigms.
The Open University Economics Seminar Series will host Pritish Behuria (University of Manchester) and Lebohang Liepollo Pheko (Trade Collective), co-authors of the aforementioned publications, and will be introduced and chaired by Giles Mohun (Professor of International Development at The Open University)
Pritish Behuria is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Manchester’s Global Development Institute, UK. He primarily researches the politics of economic transformation in East Africa. He has previously worked at the London School of Economics and Political Science and SOAS, University of London, UK.
Lebohang Liepollo Pheko is an activist scholar who is currently a Senior Research Fellow at Trade Collective, Johannesburg, South Africa. She has taught at the University of South Africa, University of Johannesburg, Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute for Technology and Linköping University. Her key scholarly interests are international trade, international development, decolonial feminism, feminist economics and globalization. Her work uses an intersectional approach to explore race, gender and class oppressions, and is rooted in social movement struggles.
Giles Mohan is Professor of International Development at the Open University. He has held various UK academic posts over the past 30 years and has an area specialism in West Africa. Giles is a human geography who works on international development. Recent work has addressed China’s engagement with Africa supported by a series of large grants from the ESRC and GCRF. His current ERC-funded REDEFINE project builds on this China-Africa work to track the implications for Chinese investment in Europe and is so doing questions the nature of global development. Giles has designed and managed a range of distance learning courses aimed at undergraduate and Masters students, and latterly extended this to short, CPD courses for international development professionals (DFID, UNICEF, Christian Aid, Save the Children, Oxfam, World Vision). He has also worked on a range of media projects with the BBC around international development including Comic Relief documentaries, the Reith Lectures and a World Service series on the SDGs.
Jennifer Larbie is Head of Campaigns and UK Advocacy at Christian Aid. Jennifer is responsible for campaigns on climate and economic justice and for involving supporters, the church and the public to make change happen. Jennifer joined Christian Aid in October 2020. Previously, Jennifer was Head of Foreign, Defence and International Development policy at the Labour Party, where she also directed the Party’s international democracy building programmes. Jennifer holds a master’s degree in development studies from the London School of Economics, specialising in economic development policy in Africa. She has previously held roles in Parliament and the National Education Union.
Explore our qualifications and courses by requesting one of our prospectuses today.