Developing resilience: a retreat from grand planning

Frederik Rosén, Søren Vester Haldrup

    Research output: Contribution to Book, Anthology, ReportBook ChapterResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    This study examines the rise of resilience thinking in international development.
    It links the resilience concept to changing ideas of capacity and argues that the
    entwined concepts of resilience and capacity increasingly frame the ways Western
    donors address societal fragility in the Global South. This study argues that resilience thinking is characterised by pragmatism and a retreat from grand planning as a response to a crisis in how fragility is handled. Increasingly, Western donors take on the role of facilitators, although responsibility for implementation and project success in the name of local ownership and bottom up approaches is put on to local partners and the recipient state. This study highlights triangularly organised south–south cooperation on ‘coaching and mentoring for capacity’ as a mode whereby donors attempt to create resilience and it argues that this type of programming encapsulates in a paradigmatic
    manner key features of, and challenges posed by, this agenda.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationThe Routledge Handbook of International Resilience
    EditorsDavid Chandler, Jon Coaffee
    PublisherRoutledge
    Publication date24 Nov 2016
    Chapter28
    ISBN (Print)9781138784321
    Publication statusPublished - 24 Nov 2016

    Keywords

    • Resilience
    • Capacity development
    • Global South
    • South-South Cooperation

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