Politicized Microfinance: Money, Power, and Violence in the Black Americas

Politicized Microfinance: Money, Power, and Violence in the Black Americas

by Caroline Shenaz Hossein
Politicized Microfinance: Money, Power, and Violence in the Black Americas

Politicized Microfinance: Money, Power, and Violence in the Black Americas

by Caroline Shenaz Hossein

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Overview

When Grameen Bank was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006, microfinance was lauded as an important contributor to the economic development of the Global South. However, political scandals, mission-drift, and excessive commercialization have tarnished this example of responsible or inclusive financial development. Politicized Microfinance insightfully discusses exclusion while providing a path towards redemption.

In this work, Caroline Shenaz Hossein explores the politics, histories and social prejudices that have shaped the legacy of microbanking in Grenada, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica and Trinidad. Writing from a feminist perspective, Hossein’s analysis is rooted in original qualitative data and offers multiple solutions that prioritize the needs of marginalized and historically oppressed people of African descent.

A must read for scholars of political economy, diaspora studies, social economy, women’s studies, as well as development practitioners, Politicized Microfinance convincingly deftly argues for microfinance to return to its origins as a political tool, fighting for those living in the margins.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442616608
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Publication date: 08/04/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Caroline Shenaz Hossein is an associate professor of Global Development and Political Science in the Department of Global Development Studies at University of Toronto Scarborough.

Table of Contents

List of Figures and Tables 

Preface 

Acknowledgments 

Nomenclature 

Abbreviations 

 

Chapter 1: Microfinance and Black People 

Chapter 2: Contextualizing Microfinance in Jamaica, Guyana, and Haiti 

Chapter 3: Cultural Politics, Bias, and Microfinance 

Chapter 4: Violence against Borrowers and Lenders in Microfinance 

Chapter 5: Alternative Banking among the African Diaspora 

Chapter 6: Banking on Indigenous Systems 

Appendix: Description of Slums in the Study 

 

Notes 

Bibliography 

Index 

What People are Saying About This

Perry Mars

Politicized Microfinance is a very interesting and pioneering study of a typically under-researched and underdeveloped issue in the Caribbean experience. Caroline Shenaz Hossein utilizes the appropriate combination of quantitative data and insightful qualitative interpretations and analysis.”

Bipasha Baruah

“No one else has studied the opportunities and constraints in access to microcredit based on the intersectional identities of race, ethnicity, and gender. Caroline Shenaz Hossein's original and important findings are a major contribution to research on microcredit.”

Jessica Gordon Nembhard

“Caroline Shenaz Hossein provides an innovative analysis that explores the importance of partisan, identity, and sexual politics in micro-lending. Politicized Microfinance is exciting, multilayered and long overdue scholarship that deepens our understanding of micro-financing and the micro-enterprise industry, particularly along race, gender, class and cultural dimensions.”

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