The first authoritative and accessible history of the United Nations Development Programme and its predecessors.
Craig N. Murphy is the Historian of the United Nations Development Programme and Professor of International Relations at Wellesley College. He is past president of the International Studies Association and co-founder of the international public policy journal, Global Governance. Craig has written and edited several books, the most recent being Global Institutions, Marginalization, and Development (2005).
1. Not the standard image; 2. Development and the United Nations; 3. Institutions for practical solidarity; 4. Decolonization and economic transformation; 5. Lewis in Ghana and after; 6. Capacity, consensus, crisis, and consequences; 7. Engaging liberation movements and revolutionary states; 8. A learning organization: women, Latin America, and Africa; 9. 'Bottoms Up' development helps make UNDP a mammal; 10. Working for 'a holy man' after the cold war; 11. 'Fabian socialists do not make the cut'; 12. 'Ploughing the sea'? UNDP and the future of global governance.