Diasporas and Development

Front Cover
Barbara Jean Merz, Lincoln C. Chen, Peter F. Geithner, Harvard University. Global Equity Initiative
Global Equity Initiative, Asia Center, Harvard University, 2007 - Business & Economics - 274 pages

Just as trade, finance, information, and technologies are moving rapidly across borders, so too have labor markets and transnational migrant communities. Migrants are sending large quantities of money back to their countries of origin in the form of philanthropy, remittances, and commercial investments. They are also sharing knowledge and skills learned or developed abroad. Is greater global equity an inevitable consequence of such diaspora philanthropy, or can this giving actually aggravate inequity? Diasporas and Development examines the positive--and sometimes negative--impacts of diaspora engagement in Africa, Asia, Central America, and the Caribbean.

How can the equity impact of this global giving be maximized? Might creative intermediary mechanisms or public policies help channel diaspora philanthropy in positive directions? They also explore motivations for the dark sides of diaspora engagement such as support for extremist organizations, organized crime, ethnic violence, and even civil war. Diasporas and Development aims to deepen the understanding of the promise and pitfalls of diaspora philanthropy and how it might help bridge the distances between societies in an unequal world.

From inside the book

Contents

CHAPTER 2
25
CHAPTER 3
55
CHAPTER 4
89
Copyright

5 other sections not shown

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2007)

Lincoln C. Chen is the President of theChina Medical Board.