Most of the literature on the World Bank struggles to understand precisely how effective are the Bank’s projects and policies, emphasizing at the same time as reaffirming certain universal parameters with which to measure the good and the bad. This article, by contrast, argues for a different way of seeing the World Bank, that is, for scholarship that interrogates the political rationalities which underlie these distinctions and categories and which make these parameters and measures viable, necessary, and enduring. Indeed, most writings – including the innumerable self‐evaluations carried out by the Bank – simultaneously note the enormity of the Bank’s past misdeeds as well as its unique position as the only global institution up to the monumental task of translating global truths into global plans of action. Because of its unique role as the global development expert, the Bank is always two steps ahead of the pack, always re‐assessing and re‐tooling for improvement in ways that most national and international institutions cannot. Who else can respond so quickly to catastrophes around the globe – appearing one month in Thailand, the next in Argentina, and, in a bomb’s flash, in Afghanistan and Iraq? In a world in which global crises routinely erupt and “require” global experts of development to resolve them, the Bank and its affiliates in the World Bank Group have no rivals. But, rather than ask why the Bank’s responses are ultimately insufficient or flawed, we must first ask how problems get defined in terms of global crises and their solutions in terms of global development institutions in the first place? How did these ideas and institutions become so influential? What power dynamics do they embody?
Article navigation
1 January 2005
Research Article|
January 01 2005
Tracing the roots/routes of World Bank power Available to Purchase
Michael Goldman
Michael Goldman
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6720
Print ISSN: 0144-333X
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2005
International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy (2005) 25 (1-2): 10–29.
Citation
Goldman M (2005), "Tracing the roots/routes of World Bank power". International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, Vol. 25 No. 1-2 pp. 10–29, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/01443330510791270
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
Alternatives to imposed administrative reform: the NGOs
International Journal of Public Sector Management (September,1997)
Open Knowledge Repository
Reference Reviews (July,2015)
Historical Dictionary of the International Monetary Fund 2nd edition
Reference Reviews (January,2000)
IMF eLibrary
Reference Reviews (October,2014)
When global means nothing: How the once all‐powerful global institutions lost control
Strategic Direction (January,2009)
Related Chapters
Policy Implications of IMF and World Bank Loans towards COVID-19 Economic Crisis on African's Development
COVID-19 in the African Continent: Sustainable Development and Socioeconomic Shocks
Restoring Confidence in the Aftermath of Iceland’s Financial Crisis
The Return of Trust? Institutions and the Public after the Icelandic Financial Crisis
Restoring Trust in Iceland: Iceland’s IMF Programme
The Return of Trust? Institutions and the Public after the Icelandic Financial Crisis
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
