For lectures
1. Richard
Jolly and Ricardo Santo, “From Development of the ‘Other’ to
Global Governance for Universal and Sustainable Development” in
Development Studies: Past, Present and Future, IDS Bulletin Vol.
47, No.2, May 2016.
2. Takamasa
Akiyama, “Evolution
of Ideas on Development,” Ch.2 in International Development
Assistance: Evolution and Prospects, FASID, 2003.
3.
Hiroshi
Kato, “Japan’s ODA 1954-2014: Changes and Continuities in a Central
Instrument in Japan’s Foreign Policy,” in Ch.1 & Kiyoshi Kodera,
"Japan's Engagement with Multilateral Development Banks: Do Their
Professional Paths Really Cross?" Ch.2 in Japan’s
Development Assistance: Foreign Aid and the Post-2015 Agenda
eds. Hiroshi Kato, John Page, and Yasutami Shimomura
4. Shigeru
Ishikawa, “Supporting Growth and Poverty Reduction: Toward Mutual
Learning from the British Model in Africa and the Japanese Model in
East Asia”, GRIPS Development Forum Discussion Paper, No.9, March
2005
5.
Toru
Yanagihara, “Development
and Dynamic Efficiency: Framework Approach vs. Ingredients Approach,”
Ch.4 in Japanese Views on Economic Development: Diverse Paths to
the Market, eds. Kenichi and Izumi Ohno, Routledge, 1998.
6. Saburo Okita,
The Developing Economies and Japan: Lessons in Growth, University of
Tokyo Press, 1980 (esp. “Developing Economics and the Japanese
Experience” (pp.93-104), “Causes and Problems of Rapid Growth in Postwar Japan
and Their Implications for Newly Developing Economies” (pp.105-147)
7.
Izumi Ohno and Kenichi Ohno,
"Eastern and Western Ideas for African Growth," in The World
Financial Review, July/Aug. 2013.
8.
Izumi Ohno, "An
Overview: Diversity and Complementarity in Development Aid," Ch.1
and "The Japanese Approach to Growth Support in Developing
Countries," Ch.7 in Eastern and Western Ideas for African Growth,
eds. Kenichi and Izumi Ohno, Routlege, 2013.
9.
Izumi
Ohno and Kenichi Ohno, “Dynamic
Capacity Development: What Africa Can Learn from Industrial Policy
Formulation,” Ch.7 in Good Growth and Governance in Africa:
Rethinking Development Strategies, eds. Noman et. al, The
Initiative for Policy Dialogue Series, Oxford University Press,
2012.
10.
Izumi Ohno, “Network-based Development Cooperation as
a Way Forward for Japan,” Ch.10 in Japanese Development Cooperation:
The Making of an Aid Architecture Pivoting to Asia, eds. Andre Asplund and Marie Soderberg, Routledge, 2017
For student workshops
(The below is a tentative list. Professor Ohno will
consult with individual students regarding the assigned readings &
presentation topics. Students can propose alternative readings, as
relevant.)
1.
Dragon Acemoglu and James A. Robinson, Why Nations Fail: The
Origins of Power, Prosperity and Poverty, New York: Currency,
2012 (Ch.2,3,7,9,13,14&15). Also, see, "The Role of
Institutions in Growth and Development," Review of Economics
and Institutions, 1(2) Article 1, 2010.
2. Dambisa
Moyo,
Dead Aid: Why Aid is not Working and How There is a better Way for
Africa, 2009.
Part I(Ch.1-4),
Part II
(Ch.5 &10)
3.
The
World Bank,
Assessing Aid: What Works, What Doesn't, and Why,
A World Bank Policy Research Report, 1998. (Esp. Overview
chapter)
4. Justin Yifu
Lin and Jun Zhang, “Learning to Catch up in a Globalized World,”
Ch.8 in How Nations Learn: Technological Learning, Industrial Policy
and Catch-up, eds. Arkebe Oqubay and Kenichi Ohno, Oxford University
Press, 2019.
5. Robert H. Wade,
“Rethinking Industrial Policy for Low Income Countries,” African
Development Bank, 2009.
6. Jose Edgardo Campose
and Hilton L. Root, "Leadership and the Economic Bureaucracy" in
Ch.6&7 and "Wooing the Business Sector" Ch.4 in The Key to the Asian Miracle: Making Shared Growth Credible,
The Brookings Institution, 1996.
7. Mikiyasu
Nakayama and Ryo Fujikura, “Technology transfer and technology development in post-World War II
Japan triggered by World Bank Projects," Ch.4 in The Rise of
Asian Donors, eds. J. Sato and Y. Shimomura, Routledge, 2012.
8. Kenichi Ohno,
“Meiji Japan: Progressive Learning of Western Technology,” Ch.5 in
How Nations Learn: Technological Learning, Industrial Policy and
Catch-up, eds. Arkebe Oqubay and Kenichi Ohno, Oxford University
Press, 2019.
9. Annalisa Prizzon, Romily Greenhil, and Shakira Mustapha,
An Age of Choice for
Development Finance: Evidence from Country Case Studies, Overseas
Development Institute, Synthesis Report, 2016.
10. The
World Bank, A Changing Landscape: Trends in Official Financial Flows
and the Aid Architecture, 2021.
11. Linda
Calabrese and Xiaoyang Tang, Africa’s Economic Transformation: The
Role of Chinese Investment, DEGRP-ODI Synthesis Report, June 2020.
12. United
Nations, Transforming Our World: The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development, 2015.
13. World Bank,
Reversals of Fortune: Poverty and Shared Prosperity 2020 (esp.
Overview, Ch.4), 2020.
14. United
Nations, Department of Social and Economic Affairs, Sustainable
Development Outlook 2021 Overview: From Anguish to Determination, 2021.
15. Jeffrey
D. Sachs, The Age of Globalization: Geography, Technology, and
Institutions, Columbia University Press (esp. Ch.1, Ch.8 & Ch.9),
2020.
16. World Bank,
World Development Report 2019: The Changing Nature of Work (esp.
Overview, Ch.1, Ch.2 & Ch.7), 2019
17. Business
and Sustainable Development Commission, Better Business, Better
World, January 2017.
18. Gaurav
Nayyar, Mary Hallward-Driemeier and Elwyn Davies, At Your
Services?: The Promise of Services-Led Development, World Bank,
(esp. Overview, Ch.3 & Ch.4) 2021.
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