The road to hell : the ravaging effects of foreign aid and international charity / Michael Maren.
By: Maren, Michael [author]
Publisher: New York : Free Press, 1997Description: xiv, 302 pages ; 25 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 0684828006Subject(s): Economic assistance -- Africa | Charities -- Africa -- Management | Charities -- Corrupt practices -- Africa | Africa -- Economic conditions -- 1960-DDC classification: 338.91096 LOC classification: HC800 | .M3527 1997Item type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOK | COLLEGE LIBRARY | COLLEGE LIBRARY SUBJECT REFERENCE | 338.91096 M334 1997 (Browse shelf) | Available | CL-27931 |
Includes index.
Darkness and night --
Land cruisers --
Far from Somalia --
Fixers --
Potemkin villages --
Death in Mogadishu --
Crazy with food --
Geneva --
Selling the children --
Crating dependency --
Wilthdrawal symptoms --
Pings at a trough --
Feading the famine --
Mogadishu line --
The self-licking ice cream cone --
Running toward Rwanda --
Merchants of peace.
Michael Maren has spent much of the last twenty years in Africa, first as an aid worker, later as a journalist. He witnessed at close range a harrowing series of wars, famines, and natural disasters. In The Road to Hell he tells how CARE unwittingly assisted a Somali dictator in building a political and economic powerbase. How the UN, Save the Children, and many other nongovernmental organizations provided raw materials for ethnic factions who subsequently threatened genocidal massacres in Rwanda and Burundi. He brings firsthand reports of African farmers, Western aid workers, and corrupt politicians from many countries, joined together in a vicious circle of self-interest. Above all, he heralds an important truth: humanitarian intervention and foreign aid activity is necessarily political. It gets hijacked by powerful charities and agricultural interests. It is cynically manipulated by local strongmen to control rebellious populations. And it is the last refuge of Western colonialism. We all want to end the suffering. But our desire to alleviate suffering often stands in the way of the truth. If you think your charitable giving is making the Third World a better place, think again.
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