Mahbub Ul Haq (1934-1998)
(2019)
Book Chapter
Power, M. (2019). Mahbub Ul Haq (1934-1998). In D. Simon (Ed.), Key Thinkers on Development (436-442). (2nd ed). Routledge
Outputs (23)
Electrification and the everyday spaces of state power in postcolonial Mozambique (2019)
Book Chapter
Kirshner, J., & Power, M. (2019). Electrification and the everyday spaces of state power in postcolonial Mozambique. In S. Abram, B. Winthereik, & T. Yarrow (Eds.), Electrifying Anthropology: Exploring Electrical Practices and Infrastructures (139-159). Bloomsbury. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350102675.0013
Modernization Theories of Development (2018)
Book Chapter
Power, M. (2018). Modernization Theories of Development. In H. Callan (Ed.), International Encyclopedia of Anthropology. Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118924396.wbiea1888
Worlds Apart? The changing geographies of global development (2016)
Book Chapter
Power, M. (2016). Worlds Apart? The changing geographies of global development. In P. Daniels, M. Bradshaw, D. Shaw, J. Sidaway, & T. Hall (Eds.), An Introduction to Human Geography (170-185). (5th edd). Pearson
Towards a Critical Geopolitics of China’s Engagement with African Development (2016)
Book Chapter
Power, M., & Mohan, G. (2016). Towards a Critical Geopolitics of China’s Engagement with African Development. In T. Young (Ed.), Readings in the International Relations of Africa (322-337). Indiana University PressChina’s growth has required a concerted economic internationalisation and with it changing foreign policy discourses, that bring China closer binationally and multilaterally to other countries. As a result the orientation of China’s vision of ‘develo... Read More about Towards a Critical Geopolitics of China’s Engagement with African Development.
The Rise of the BRICS (2015)
Book Chapter
Power, M. (2015). The Rise of the BRICS. In J. Agnew, V. Mamadouh, A. Secor, & J. Sharp (Eds.), The Wiley Blackwell companion to political geography (379-392). John Wiley and Sons. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118725771.ch28Coined in 2001 by an economist at the multinational global investment firm Goldman Sachs, the “BRICs” acronym (referring to Brazil, Russia, India, and China) identified a group of four countries that were, due to their scale, population size, and gro... Read More about The Rise of the BRICS.
Reappraising Geopolitical Traditions. (2013)
Book Chapter
Sidaway, J., Mamadouh, V., & Power, M. (2013). Reappraising Geopolitical Traditions. In K. Dodds, M. Kuus, & J. Sharp (Eds.), The Ashgate Research Companion to Critical Geopolitics (165-188). Ashgate Publishing. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315612874.ch9This chapter reworks some material from Sidaway and Mamadouh (2012) and Mamadouh (1998). We are grateful to Pearson and Kluwer for permission to rework and incorporate that material here. We are also grateful to Klaus Dodds and Merje Kuus for their h... Read More about Reappraising Geopolitical Traditions..
The Scopic Regime of Africa. (2010)
Book Chapter
Campbell, D., & Power, M. (2010). The Scopic Regime of Africa. In F. MacDonald, R. Hughes, & K. Dodds (Eds.), Observant States: Geopolitics and Visual Culture (167-198). I.B. Tauris
China and the geo-political imagination of African ‘development’ (2010)
Book Chapter
Power, M., & Mohan, G. (2010). China and the geo-political imagination of African ‘development’. In C. Dent (Ed.), China and Africa Development Relations (42-67). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203845028In its pursuit of this growth-oriented model, a number of African countries have come to occupy centrestage in Chinese foreign policy as potential sources of raw materials to fuel China’s growth or as emerging markets for Chinese goods. In this way,... Read More about China and the geo-political imagination of African ‘development’.
'Digital war games and post 9/11 geographies of militarism'. (2009)
Book Chapter
Power, M. (2009). 'Digital war games and post 9/11 geographies of militarism'. In R. Schubart, F. Virchow, & D. White-Stanley (Eds.), War Isn't Hell, it's Entertainment: Essays on Visual Media and the Representation of Conflict (198-215). McFarland