Books by "William H. Chenery"

12 books found

Genealogical and Personal Memoirs

Genealogical and Personal Memoirs

by William Richard Cutter

2000 · Genealogical Publishing Com

The Visitation of Suffolke

The Visitation of Suffolke

by William Harvey

1868

The Wider Fellowship

The Wider Fellowship

by Charles William Wendte

1927

The Evolution of Development Thinking

The Evolution of Development Thinking

by William Ascher, Garry D. Brewer, G. Shabbir Cheema, John M. Heffron

2016 · Springer

This landmark book offers a comprehensive analysis of how development approaches have evolved since World War II, examining and also evaluating the succession of theories, doctrines, and practices that have been formulated and applied in the Third World and beyond. Covering all developing regions, the book offers an integrated approach for considering the entwined aspects of development: governance, economics, foreign assistance, civil society, and the military. With reference to carefully chosen case studies, the authors offer distinctive explanations for why development approaches fall short and systematically relate the evolution of development thinking to current challenges, identifying the strengths and weaknesses of key institutions and the clashes of institutional interests that have distorted otherwise sound doctrines and negatively affected development practice. In identifying the dynamics that account for shortcomings in past development attempts, and recommending a better integration of doctrines across the entire range of inter-connected development fronts, the book points to how development practice may be improved to better advance human dignity.

Asian Development

Asian Development

by William E. James, Seiji Naya, Gerald M. Meier

1989 · Univ of Wisconsin Press

While the world's attention has been focused on the spectacular economic success of Japan and Korea, the less developed countries of Asia have often been neglected. Asian Development closes the gap. In nontechnical style and with minimal mathematics, it presents an in-depth perspective on the economic development of fourteen countries in East, Southeast, and South Asia. Asian Development is mainly a story of success. Though some problems remain, Asian countries have shown remarkable resilience in responding to sharp changes in the international economy--oil shocks, world recession and inflation, exchange-rate and interest-rate fluctuations, and rapid technological change. The authors conclude that their ability to adjust to changing external conditions is closely related to intelligent governmental policies. Looking back they comment: "In the past, growth of the United States and Japan pulled up the growth rates of the smaller economies in the region." Looking forward, they predict: "In the future, increasingly it will be the growth of the Asian developing countries that acts as a catalyst to growth in the more advanced economies."

The Postwar Japanese System

The Postwar Japanese System

by William K. Tabb

1995

A critical examination of Japan's recent economic success, which places the country's post-war "miracle" within a broader social and political framework. It argues that the political and social arrangements that allowed Japan to succeed are now eroding

Are Labor Markets in Developing Countries Dualistic?

Are Labor Markets in Developing Countries Dualistic?

by William Francis Maloney

1998 · World Bank Publications