Depoliticizing the countryside? The World Bank’s role in agriculture and rural development

Schmidtke, Tobias

Research article (book contribution) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Following the publication of the WDR 2008 on ‘Agriculture for Development’, the World Bank has re-assumed a leadership role in the global governance of agriculture and rural development. This re-engagement has surprised many observers, since agriculture had become increasingly sidelined within the Bank after the neoliberal turn of the 1980s and in the face of increasingly visible protests against the adverse social and environmental consequences of its policies. In this chapter, I investigate the reasons behind this renewed interest and assess how its current policies diverge from past approaches. I argue that this shift is best explained as the Bank’s response to a growing legitimacy gap that accommodates key criticisms from external contenders while simultaneously adopting a de-politicization strategy that frames issues incongruent with its organizational culture in technical, apolitical terms. I provide evidence of this strategy by analyzing the examples of the Bank’s land reform policy and climate-smart agriculture.

Details about the publication

PublisherVetterlein, Antje; Schmidtke, Tobias
Book titleThe Elgar Companion to the World Bank
Page range251-262
Publishing companyEdward Elgar Publishing
Place of publicationCheltenham and Northampton
Title of seriesElgar Companions to International Organizations
StatusPublished
Release year2024
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
ISBN9781802204773
DOI10.4337/9781802204780.00034
Link to the full texthttps://www.elgaronline.com/edcollchap/book/9781802204780/book-part-9781802204780-34.xml
KeywordsAgriculture; Rural development; World Bank; Legitimacy; Depoliticization

Authors from the University of Münster

Schmidtke, Tobias
Institute of Political Science (IfPol)