Empowerment has emerged as a key focus of development policy and practices in the
contemporary era, where simultaneously a need for 'development' is ascribed due to
historically determined power relations imposed through discourse and intervention. This
research enquires into the contradiction inherent in assuming an intemational agenda to
empower those who are continually disempowered. Through analysis of a series of case
studies of development projects in Zambia, this research argues that the potential of the
empowerment agenda is inherently limited by the ongoing structural conditions of
development. In the cases studied, community members successfiilly achieve a form of
'subjective empowerment' which enables them to assume a more powerful role within the
boundaries of action determined by their possible frameworks of opportunity. But these
forms of power do not hold the potential to create communities which are relatively more
powerful on the global stage. Progression to a form of 'objective empowerment' is
constrained by the boundaries to power which are imposed through historically set and
continually recreated power relations within the global political economy.
Date of Award | 2009 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Awarding Institution | |
---|
Supervisor | Richard Professor Gibb (Other Supervisor) |
---|
The Power of Empowerment:Recognising Power Relations within 'Development' for Communities in Zambia
Treasure, K. (Author). 2009
Student thesis: PhD