Making good citizens: Power and empowerment in community development programmes in Nepal

Tina Søndergård Madsen, Peter Triantafillou

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Søndergård Madsen and Triantafillou stress the importance of how power and empowerment take shape in interactive governance. In Nepal, one of the poorest countries in the world, a number of empowerment programmes and self-help community groups have sprung up during the past decade. Søndergård Madsen and Triantafillou examine how and with what political effects empowerment was linked to poverty alleviation in Nepal through the Local Governance and Community Development Programme (LGCDP). They argue that the alleviation of poverty was not an immediate, but rather a long-term, objective of the programme. Building on Foucault’s analytics of power and freedom, they critically reflect on the political implications of empowerment-based poverty alleviation for the strategies that the poor can legitimately adopt in order to improve their economic situation. The authors argue that the program is based on a strong advanced liberal rationale, which favours certain forms of participation and citizenship over other forms thus limiting the individual’s freedom by excluding various practices of action and protest.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCritical reflections on interactive governance : Self-organization and Participation in Public Governance
EditorsJurian Edelenbos, Ingmar van Meerkerk
Number of pages22
Place of PublicationCheltenham
PublisherEdward Elgar Publishing
Publication date2016
Pages167-188
Chapter8
ISBN (Print)9781783479061
ISBN (Electronic)9781783479078
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

Cite this