Assignment 2
Detailed Response
Due 2025
, DVA4805
Assignment 2 – Detailed Response
Due 2025
Introduction
Postcolonialism and feminism are critical frameworks that have profoundly reshaped the
gender and development discourse by exposing entrenched assumptions, power
asymmetries, and the universality often implicit in traditional development paradigms.
Both approaches challenge Western-centric models that dominate mainstream
development thinking, advocating instead for the inclusion of marginalized voices,
especially women in the Global South. These perspectives not only critique existing
models but also propose transformative alternatives emphasizing decolonization,
intersectionality, and participatory empowerment.
Postcolonialism’s Critique of Development
Development as a Colonial Continuum
Postcolonial theory interrogates development as an extension of colonial domination,
where North-South power dynamics persist through neo-colonial agendas under the
guise of progress. Arturo Escobar’s Encountering Development (1995) describes
development as a discourse—an ideological apparatus that constructs the Global South
as deficient and in need of Western salvation, thus perpetuating colonial hierarchies
through pathologizing poverty and underdevelopment. This framing facilitates a savior
complex that reinforces Western dominance.
Challenging Eurocentrism
Development strategies promoted by institutions like the World Bank and IMF, such as
Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs), impose neoliberal policies—market
liberalization, privatization, and deregulation—that often destabilize local economies
and social fabrics. In regions like Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, SAPs in the
1980s and 1990s led to reductions in public services and increased poverty,