多元主义、贫困与分成制佃农:培养发展研究中的开放心态

Pluralism, poverty and sharecropping: Cultivating open-mindedness in development studies

Journal of Development Studies · 2006
被引 30
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

探讨多元主义如何深化发展研究中的方法混合,以印度佃农为例,比较新古典、制度主义和马克思主义理论,强调跨学科对话对减贫政策的意义。

Abstract

Abstract Pluralism adds depth to the mixing of methods in development studies. Global society has both structure and complexity, and agents within society actively promote competing ways of describing and interpreting that society. Theoretical pluralism offers a way for social scientists to describe and judge the competing theories about a given social situation. (Methodological pluralism is also discussed in this paper.) An example – tenancy in India – is explored to illustrate how pluralists compare theories. The tenancy literature includes neoclassical, institutionalist, and Marxist theories. These cut across three academic disciplines. Pluralist research is often interdisciplinary in such ways. Such interdisciplinary research generates a dialogue across epistemological chasms and across theories that have different underlying assumptions. Pluralist research can be valued for its discursive bridging function. Pluralist research can also contribute to improvements in scientific measurement. Divergent schools of thought can be brought into contact by reconceptualising the objects of research, such as contracts or coercion. In the tenancy literature, alternative ways of measuring and interpreting power arose. Structuralist approaches tended to assume poverty and inequality as part of the context within which economic action takes place. Strengths and weaknesses of such assumptions are examined. The approach recommended here, which is realist, makes possible an improved dialogue about policy changes aimed at poverty reduction.

理论多元主义方法论多元主义佃农制度发展研究