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Politics and Development Studies Research Group

Studying political aspects of development of special relevance for low- and middle-income countries

Politics and development research at the department deals with matters of democratization, political regimes, political economy, political participation, civil society, human rights, nationalism, ethnicity and gender.

The group is interested in the linkages between global and local policy and governance processes, authoritarian regimes and democratization, conflict resolution and peace processes.

The research concerns the diffusion of norms and ideas, and the confrontation between modernity, tradition, secularization, religion and identities.

Empirical research includes development cooperation, international organisations, transnational activism, migration, peacebuilding, women’s empowerment, labour rights/decent work, sustainable development, corruption and global health. Geographically the research covers parts of Asia, Africa, Middle East and North Africa, Latin America and Western Balkan.

For publications please see list of researchers below.

Anders Uhlin
E-mail: anders [dot] uhlin [at] svet [dot] lu [dot] se (anders[dot]uhlin[at]svet[dot]lu[dot]se)

23 September 2024 12:15 to 13:30 | Location: Large Conference Room, Eden (Ed 367)

(Jointly organized with the Environmental Politics research group)

Politics and Development Studies Research Group: Jewellord Nem Singh (Wilson Centre, Washington DC, and Erasmus University Rotterdam): The Politics of Supply Chains of Renewable Energy and the EU’s Quest for Strategic Autonomy


21-23 October
Development Research Conference, Lund University
Please see conference website for program and registration:
https://www.lucsus.lu.se/devres2024 


Tuesday 19 November, 12.00-13.00 in Eden 367
Adea Gafuri (Swedish Institute of International Affairs): Does it Matter to Politicians Where Foreign Aid Comes From? An Experimental Test with Elites
(Jointly organized with the Comparative Politics research group)


Monday 9 December, 12.00-12.30 in Eden 367
Joint discussion on positionality in reflective research, based on the recent ISQ-article "Positionality Statements as a Function of Coloniality: Interrogating Reflexive Methodologies" (Gani and Khan, 2024).

Link to the article: https://academic.oup.com/isq/article/68/2/sqae038/7642608 
(Jointy organized with the Peace and International Politics and the Gender and Politics research groups)


Please also note the many interesting Development Lunch Seminars organized by the Development Research School:
https://www.developmentresearchschool.lu.se/development-lunch-seminars

Researchers in the group teach and supervise several courses and programmes relevant for development studies.

Several PhD students work with dissertation topics within the area of development studies.

More information on PhD studies