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Charles Piot, ed. Doing Development in West Africa: A Reader by and for Undergraduates. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2016. x + 222 pp. Photographs. Index. $23.95. Paper. ISBN: 978-780822361923.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 March 2017

Peter D. Little*
Affiliation:
Emory University Atlanta, Georgiapdlittl@emory.edu
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Abstract

Type
BOOK REVIEWS
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2017 

Doing Development in West Africa is an edited collection of essays written by undergraduate students at Duke University and intended for an audience of undergraduate students. The editor of this anthology is the well-known senior anthropologist Charles Piot, who has conducted research in northern Togo for more than twenty-five years and has generously opened up his research site and vast networks and connections in the region to a small group of undergraduate students each summer since 2008. The students design and work on “do-it-yourself” (DIY) low-cost development projects with the support of university funds, especially from Duke’s Global Health Institute and a service-learning program called DukeEngage. The book provides valuable lessons for students interested in summer service projects in the Global South.

Following a short introductory chapter about the Duke summer program and the region where it is located, Piot removes himself from the volume until the end, when he returns with a short epilogue. The rest of the book, ten chapters in total, was written by students. Part 1, “Personal Reflections,” consists of narratives by six students reflecting on their experiences in Togo and covering topics from culture and geographic shock—“I was in an entirely different world (19)”—to misplaced stereotypes of Africa and the ways in which “failure can be instructive (10).” In fact, despite the good intentions and hard work, failure was the outcome for some projects and students were taught to expect minimal success. The students are refreshingly honest about their project’s shortcomings and how “messy” the world of development practice and intervention is, probably because they are not dependent on “success” for continued employment and project funding. They therefore speak willingly of deficiencies in the development process that an NGO employee or other development worker would be reluctant to confess.

The second part of the volume, titled “Research Articles,” includes nine chapters on a range of studies and projects written by individual students. Most cover an applied research activity that addresses a real world problem. It is unsurprising that many of the chapters are concerned with human health, since global health studies is widely popular on many U.S. campuses. Thus, five of the ten chapters deal with different aspects of health, including “Biomedicine and Traditional Healing” (chapter 3) and “Rural Medicine in an Urban Setting” (chapter 4). One particularly interesting chapter (chapter 5) covers a village health insurance scheme whose initial successes were not sustained. Questioning why this was so, the author found that although the annual subscription fee was minimal ($3.60 per family per year), the timing of the fee collection, the availability of essentially free treatment from traditional healers, and poor understanding of annual medical costs kept local participation low. However, the number of insurers tripled once a student visited homesteads to explain the level of cash savings that could be attained through insurance; the personal touch proved to be an important factor. Other innovative chapters cover a micro-finance program for youth (chapter 9), a computer training initiative (chapter 8), and youth migration (chapter 6). In these and other chapters, the importance of youth and the challenges they present for health, education, and employment are highlighted. As youths themselves, the student authors are perhaps better positioned to understand the situation of their Togolese peers than their teachers are.

Doing Development in West Africa will be a valuable book for courses in international development, African studies, and development anthropology, and provides good “hands-on” guidance for students preparing for summer projects in Africa, Asia, or Latin America. While written for undergraduates, the book also provides important lessons for development practitioners who often fail to appreciate the importance of local context, history, and knowledge systems, and then wonder why their development efforts go awry.