INTRODUCTION: The American Answer
CHAPTER ONE: Improving Nations
CHAPTER TWO: A Global Economy
CHAPTER THREE: Strategic Ethiopia
CHAPTER FOUR: Truman's Fourth Point
CHAPTER FIVE: The Ethiopian Experiment
CHAPTER SIX: The Development Decade
CHAPTER SEVEN: Rethinking the American Answer
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Amanda Kay McVety is Assistant Professor of History at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio.
"Setting Ethiopia's tragedy in the context of the Cold War and two
centuries of economic thought, Enlightened Aid is a definitive and
revealing requiem for development."--The Journal of American
History
"This broadly-conceived and highly original study makes an
important contribution to the growing literature on the pre-Cold
War history of developmentalism, whose origins are traced back to
the thinkers of the Scottish Enlightenment in the eighteenth
century. Spanning eight decades of American interventions in
Ethiopia, Enlightened Aid provides an often surprising account of a
paradigmatic example of American foreign aid, and its underlying
hubristic
rationales, which have been inexplicably neglected by historians
and other social scientists."--Michael Adas, Abraham E. Voorhees
Professor of History, Rutgers University at New Brunswick
"Amanda Kay McVety's ambitious book situates American development
aid to Ethiopia in the broadest context, shedding light on the
evolving meanings of development, on American programs in the early
Cold War, and on the emergence of the peculiar developmentalist
state of Ethiopia. Ranging from David Hume to Walt Rostow, from
Haile Selassie to Jeffrey Sachs, Enlightened Aid is a welcome
contribution to histories of development, expanding the
geographic
and chronological boundaries of the field."--David C. Engerman,
Associate Professor of History, Brandeis University
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