I am a human geographer who gained his PhD from Liverpool University in 1993. My work concerns the politics of development, particularly the intermingling of territorial scales and transnational networks. I have taught at Liverpool University, the University of Central Lancashire, Portsmouth University and The Open University. I was a handling editor of the Review of African Political Economy and a member of the editorial boards of Political Geography, Antipode, Geography Compass, and the International Development Planning Review. I have also acted as consultant to Open University/BBC productions including African School, Indian School, Comic Relief, the Reith Lectures, Why Poverty? and Project17. Since October 2014, I have directed the Open University's Strategic Research Area (SRA) in International Development and Inclusive Innovation. This is a pan-university and inter-disciplinary endeavour to develop large, challenge-led bids.
I have had a number of research projects on China's internationalisation and the implications for global development. The latest is a European Research Council Advanced Grant entitled Re-orienting development: the dynamics and effects of Chinese infrastructure investment in Europe (REDEFINE) which builds on previous work on China-Africa relations. In 2007 I received an ESRC grant entitled The politics of Chinese engagement with African 'development': Case studies of Angola and Ghana. This was followed up in 2010 by another ESRC grant on Chinese migrants as agents of development and another as part of a network under the ESRC’s Rising Powers Programme. In 2015 I was awarded a DFID-ESRC project on Chinese National Oil Companies in Africa, which assesses the impacts of these firms on African development.
Previously I worked on the developmental impacts of the diaspora, based on both theoretical work and case studies of the Ghanaian diaspora in the UK and its linkages to Ghana. With my recent study of Chinese migrants in Africa I was keen to develop these insights around new migration trajectories and Africa’s development. This concern with the role of migrants in local development evolved out of my work on decentralised and participatory development, which is an on-going interest. I currently also have a GCRF project entitled Migration for Inclusive African Growth, which examines whether and how migration within and to Africa yields more inclusive forms of development.
Together with colleagues in the Open University's International Development Office we have peoduced a series of short courses aimed at professionals working in international development and humanitarianism. These are available on FutureLearn, OpenLearn and OpenLearnCreate and have been co-produced with international NGOs and donors including UNICEF, Christain Aid, FCDO, and Oxfam.
Name | Type | Parent Unit |
---|---|---|
Centre for Citizenship, Identifies and Governance (CCIG) | Centre | Faculty of Social Sciences |
OpenSpace Research Centre | Centre | Faculty of Social Sciences |
Role | Start date | End date | Funding source |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | 01 Nov 2020 | 31 Oct 2025 | EC (European Commission): FP (inc. Horizon Europe, H2020, ERC) |
REDEFINE will examine what China’s rise means for how we understand global development and, specifically, Europe’s place in it. After 15 years of ‘going out’ to source raw materials and new markets, often in the global South, China is making assertive moves into more developed economies, which were boosted by the Belt and Road Initiative linking China to Europe. At the same time, many European economies stagnated following the 2008 financial crisis with governments cutting back on infrastructure investment and looking for new sources of finance. China now sees Europe as fertile ground for new infrastructure investment. The first wave of Chinese internationalisation into the global South has been analysed largely from the perspective of international Development Studies. In the current phase, China’s move westwards radically questions the meanings and loci of development. REDEFINE’s innovation is to use insights from international development to interrogate Chinese engagement in the heart of Europe and by doing so re-orient the Eurocentric debates in the social sciences around how we define and delimit development, who drives these processes, and what it means for societies and communities affected by such investments. REDEFINE’s aims require a disaggregated perspective to unpack project-by-project effects, which will be undertaken through an assemblage approach. Through comparative, ethnographic case studies across the UK, Germany, Greece and Hungary REDEFINE will produce fine-grained empirical analysis to understand the rationales for Chinese investment into Europe, the geopolitical dynamics surrounding these financing streams, the structuring of specific projects, and the ways in which these investments interface with national and local development policy. By better understanding how investment deals operate, REDEFINE will connect Chinese and European government and corporate actors in order to influence their strategies and practices. |
Role | Start date | End date | Funding source |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | 01 Sep 2018 | 31 Jan 2022 | ESRC Economic and Social Research Council |
A new wave of economic dynamism in Africa has created a pressing challenge of translating this elite-based, resource-driven growth into more inclusive growth. Africa’s growth has intensified contemporary migration within and to the continent, with important implications for sustainable and inclusive growth in both ‘sending’ and ‘receiving’ contexts. Therefore, the aim of the project is to understand how and to what extent contemporary migrant communities are taking advantage of, and contributing to, sustainable and inclusive growth in Africa. Despite being an important channel for trade, investment and skills development, little is known about the nature and potentially transformative outcomes of these diverse migration flows. In addressing this, the novelty of this project is threefold: (1) in analysing the impacts of migration through the lens of inclusive growth, (2) in exploring internal, regional and intercontinental migration together and moving the study of migration and development beyond South-to-North flows, and (3) in co-designing policy responses and capacity-building resources for optimising the contribution of migration to inclusive African growth. This proposal arises out of an ESRC GCRF network grant that has identified, through a series of workshops hosted by the African partners, that our knowledge of the size, motivations, organisation and impacts of recent flows of migrants and their relations with host communities is largely anecdotal, while official data is fragmented, inaccurate or partial. This proposal will produce the first multi-country comparative study of these groups in Africa, with a focus on how and with what impact these groups operate in the manufacturing and service sectors of four African countries (Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, and Mozambique) that are all on the OECD DAC list. |
De-risking, re-balancing and recentralising: Intra-state relations in Chinese-backed transport infrastructure projects in Europe (2024-08)
Mohan, Giles; Boni, Filippo; Rogers, Samuel; Schaefer, Florian and Wang, Yue
Political Geography, 113, Article 103152
The interface of environment and human wellbeing: Exploring the impacts of gold mining on food security in Ghana (2024-04)
Obodai, Jacob; Bhagwat, Shonil and Mohan, Giles
Resources Policy, 91, Article 104863
Gold mining's environmental footprints, drivers, and future predictions in Ghana (2024-01)
Obodai, Jacob; Bhagwat, Shonil and Mohan, Giles
Remote Sensing Applications: Society and Environment, 33, Article 101103
How are Chinese investments in Europe shaped by the ‘de-risking’ narrative? (2024)
Mohan, Giles and Pollard, Natalie
The Project Repository Journal, 20(1) (pp. 122-125)
Conceptualising Chinese transnational infrastructure projects in Europe and beyond (2024)
Schaefer, Florian and Mohan, Giles
Progress in Human Geography ((Early access))
Beyond legislation: Unpacking land access capability in small-scale mining and its intersections with the agriculture sector in sub-Saharan Africa (2023-10-12)
Obodai, Jacob; Mohan, Giles and Bhagwat, Shonil
The Extractive Industries and Society, 16, Article 101357
Is Europe going cold on Chinese infrastructure investment? (2023)
Mohan, Giles and Pollard, Natalie
The Project Repository Journal, 16(1) (pp. 24-27)
How far is Chinese infrastructure investment in Europe a success story? (2023)
Mohan, Giles and Pollard, Natalie
The Project Repository Journal, 18 (pp. 64-67)
What happens when Chinese firms invest in European infrastructure? (2022-01-31)
Mohan, Giles
The Project Repository Journal, 12 (pp. 42-45)
Below the Belt? Territory and Development in China’s International Rise (2021-01-15)
Mohan, Giles
Development and Change, 52(1) (pp. 54-75)
Responding to the commodity boom with varieties of resource nationalism: a political economy explanation for the different routes taken by Africa’s new oil producers (2020-11)
Hickey, Sam; Izama, Angelo; Abdullai, Abdul-Gafaru and Mohan, Giles
The Extractives Industry and Society, 7(4) (pp. 1246-1256)
The Geopolitics of South-South Infrastructure Development: Chinese-financed energy projects in the global South (2019-05)
Mohan, Giles and Tan-Mullins, May
Urban Studies, 56(7) (pp. 1368-1385)
Author response to reviews of Lived Experience (2019)
Neal, Sarah; Bennett, Katy; Cochrane, Allan and Mohan, Giles
Ethnic and Racial Studies, 42(3) (pp. 409-416)
Large dams, energy justice and the divergence between international, national and local developmental needs and priorities in the global South (2018-07)
Siciliano, Giuseppina and ,
Energy Research & Social Science, 41 (pp. 199-209)
Community and Conviviality? Informal Social Life in Multicultural Places (2018-04-10)
Neal, Sarah; Bennett, Katy; Cochrane, Allan and Mohan, Giles
Sociology, 53(1) (pp. 69-86)
Party Politics and the Political Economy of Ghana’s Oil (2018)
Mohan, Giles; Asante, Kojo Pumpuni and Abdulai, Abdul-Gafaru
New Political Economy, 23(3) (pp. 274-289)
Negotiating the educational spaces of urban multiculture: Skills, competencies and college life (2017-08)
Bennett, Katy; Cochrane, Allan; Mohan, Giles and Neal, Sarah
Urban Studies, 54(10) (pp. 2305-2321)
'You can't move in Hackney without bumping into an anthropologist': why certain places attract research attention (2016-10-01)
Neal, Sarah; Mohan, Giles; Cochrane, Allan and Bennett, Katy
Qualitative Research, 16(5) (pp. 491-507)
Multiculture and public parks: researching super-diversity and attachment in public green space (2015-07)
Neal, Sarah; Bennett, Katy; Jones, Hannah; Cochrane, Allan and Mohan, Giles
Population, Space and Place, 21(5) (pp. 463-475)
Queuing up for Africa: the geoeconomics of Africa’s growth and the politics of African agency (2015)
Mohan, Giles
International Development Planning Review, 37(1)
Urban multiculture and everyday encounters in semi-public, franchised cafe spaces (2015)
Jones, Hannah; Neal, Sarah; Mohan, Giles; Connell, Kieran; Cochrane, Allan and Bennett, Katy
Sociological Review, 63(3) (pp. 644-661)
Listening (2015)
Bennett, Katy; Cochrane, Allan; Mohan, Giles and Neal, Sarah
Emotion, Space and Society, 17 (pp. 7-14)
Sino-African encounters in Ghana and Nigeria: from conflict to conviviality and mutual benefit (2014)
Lampert, Ben and Mohan, Giles
Journal of Current Chinese Affairs, 43(1) (pp. 9-39)
Beyond the enclave: towards a critical political economy of China and Africa (2013-11-04)
Mohan, Giles
Development and Change, 44(6) (pp. 1255-1272)
'The Chinese just come and do it’: China in Africa and the prospects for development planning (2013-06)
Mohan, Giles
International Development Planning Review, 35(3) (v-xii)
Living multiculture: understanding the new spatial and social relations of ethnicity and multiculture in England (2013-04-01)
Neal, Sarah; Bennett, Katy; Cochrane, Allan and Mohan, Giles
Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy, 31(2) (pp. 308-323)
The potential of corporate environmental responsibility of Chinese state-owned enterprises in Africa (2013-04)
Tan-Mullins, May and Mohan, Giles
Environment, Development and Sustainability, 15(2) (pp. 265-284)
China as a new shaper of international development: the environmental implications (2013-04)
Urban, Frauke; Mohan, Giles and Cook, Sarah
Environment, Development and Sustainability, 15(2) (pp. 257-263)
Negotiating China: reinserting African agency into China-Africa relations (2013-01)
Mohan, Giles and Lampert, Ben
African Affairs, 112(446) (pp. 92-110)
Multiculture and community in new city spaces (2011-04)
Kesten, Jamie; Cochrane, Allan; Mohan, Giles and Neal, Sarah
Journal of Intercultural Studies, 32(2) (pp. 133-150)
Redefining 'aid' in the China–Africa context (2010-09-29)
Tan-Mullins, May; Mohan, Giles and Power, Marcus
Development and Change, 41(5) (pp. 857-881)
Towards a critical geopolitics of China's engagement with African development (2010)
Power, Marcus and Mohan, Giles
Geopolitics, 15(3) (pp. 462-495)
Chinese migrants in Africa as new agents of development? An analytical framework (2009-09)
Mohan, Giles and Tan-Mullins, May
European Journal of Development Research, 21(4) (pp. 588-605)
Africa, China and the ‘new’ economic geography of development (2009-03)
Mohan, Giles and Power, Marcus
Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, 30(1) (pp. 24-28)
The politics of establishing pro-poor accountability: what can poverty reduction strategies achieve? (2008-05)
Hickey, Samuel and Mohan, Giles
Review of International Political Economy, 15(2) (pp. 234-258)
China in Africa: A Review Essay (2008-03)
Mohan, Giles
Review of African Political Economy, 35(1) (pp. 155-173)
New African Choices? The Politics of Chinese Engagement (2008-03)
Mohan, Giles and Power, Marcus
Review of African Political Economy, 35(1) (pp. 23-42)
Social Relationships of New Chinese Migrants in Africa (2008-02)
Mohan, Giles
The China Monitor - The Centre for Chinese Studies(26) (pp. 6-8)
Making neoliberal states of development: the Ghanaian diaspora and the politics of homelands (2008)
Mohan, Giles
Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 26(3) (pp. 464-479)
The war on terror, American hegemony and international development (2007-08)
Mohan, Giles and Mawdsley, Emma
Review of International Political Economy, 14(3) (pp. 439-443)
Participatory development: from epistemological reversals to active citizenship (2007-07)
Mohan, Giles
Geography Compass, 1(4) (pp. 779-796)
Governing and democratising technology for development: bridging theory and practice (2007-05)
Mohan, Giles and Yanacopulos, Helen
Science and Public Policy, 34(4) (pp. 233-238)
Embedded cosmopolitanism and the politics of obligation: the Ghanaian diaspora and development (2006-03-01)
Mohan, Giles
Environment and Planning A, 38(5) (pp. 867-883)
Learning from African School (2006)
Yanacopulos, Helen and Mohan, Giles
Development Education Journal, 12(2) (pp. 19-22)
The Antagonistic relevance of development studies (2005-10)
Mohan, Giles and Wilson, Gordon
Progress in Development Studies, 5(4) (pp. 261-278)
Relocating participation within a radical politics of development (2005-03)
Hickey, Sam and Mohan, Giles
Development and Change, 36(2) (pp. 237-262)
Networks as transnational agents of development (2004-07)
Henry, Leroi; Mohan, Giles and Yanacopulos, Helen
Third World Quarterly, 25(5) (pp. 839-855)
Towards a critical political geography of African development (2003-11)
Mercer, Claire; Mohan, Giles and Power, Marcus
Geoforum, 34(4) (pp. 419-436)
Globalisation from below: conceptualising the role of the African diasporas in Africa's development (2002-07)
Mohan, Giles and Zack-Williams, A.B.
Review of African Political Economy, 29(92) (pp. 211-236)
Placing social capital (2002-04)
Mohan, G. and Mohan, J.
Progress in Human Geography, 26(2) (pp. 191-210)
The disappointments of civil society: the politics of NGO intervention in northern Ghana (2002-01)
Mohan, Giles
Political Geography, 21(1) (pp. 125-154)
Human rights and development in Africa: moral intrusion or empowering opportunity? (2001)
Mohan, Giles and Holland, Jeremy
Review of African Political Economy, 28(88) (pp. 177-196)
Participatory development and empowerment: the dangers of localism (2000-04)
Mohan, Giles and Stokke, Kristian
Third World Quarterly, 21(2) (pp. 247-268)
Dislocating Globalisation: power, politics and global change (2000)
Mohan, Giles
Geography, 85(2) (pp. 121-133)
Not so distant, not so strange: The personal and the political in participatory research (1999-03)
Mohan, Giles
Philosophy and Geography, 2(1) (pp. 41-54)
Radicalism, relevance and the future of ROAPE (1998-06)
Mohan, Giles
Review of African Political Economy, 25(76) (pp. 263-264)
Developing differences: post-structuralism and political economy in contemporary development studies (1997-09)
Mohan, Giles
Review of African Political Economy, 24(73) (pp. 311-328)
Globalisation, liberal theory and the spatiality of governance in Sub-Saharan Africa (1997-05)
Mohan, Giles
Space and Polity, 1(1) (pp. 83-101)
Adjustment and decentralization in Ghana: a case of diminished sovereignty (1996-01)
Mohan, Giles
Political Geography, 15(1) (pp. 75-94)
Neoliberalism and decentralised development planning in Ghana (1996)
Mohan, Giles
Third World Planning Review, 18(4) (pp. 433-454)
SAP's and Development in West Africa (1996)
Mohan, Giles
Geography, 81(4) (pp. 4-8)
The restructuring of intellectual activity: a response to Pratt, and Barnett and Low (1996)
Mohan, Giles
Area, 28(3) (pp. 384-389)
Manufacturing Consensus: (Geo) Political Knowledge and Policy-Based Lending (1994-12)
Mohan, Giles
Review of African Political Economy, 21(62) (pp. 525-583)
Destruction of the con: geography and the commodification of knowledge (1994-12)
Mohan, Giles
Area, 26(4) (pp. 387-390)
Lived Experiences of Multiculture: The New Social and Spatial Relations of Diversity (2018-09-05)
Neal, Sarah; Bennett, Katy; Cochrane, Allan and Mohan, Giles
Routledge Research in Race and Ethnicity
ISBN : 978-1-138-64505-9 | Publisher : Routledge | Published : Abingdon
Chinese Migrants and Africa's Development: New Imperialists or Agents of Change? (2014-06-12)
Mohan, Giles; Lampert, Ben; Tan-Mullins, May and Chang, Daphne
ISBN : 9781780329161 | Publisher : Zed Books | Published : London
China's Resource Diplomacy in Africa - Powering Development? (2012-07-17)
Power, Marcus; Mohan, Giles and Tan-Mullins, May
International Political Economy Series
ISBN : 9780230229129 | Publisher : Palgrave McMillan | Published : London
Structural Adjustment: Theory, practice and impacts (2000)
Brown, Ed; Milward, Bob; Mohan, Giles and Zack-Williams, Alfred B.
ISBN : 0-415-12521-9 | Publisher : Routledge | Published : UK
Participatory development (2024-04-09)
Mohan, Giles
In: Dauncey, Emil; Desai, Vandana and Potter, Robert B. eds. The Companion to Development Studies (4th Edition) (pp. 484-489)
ISBN : 9780429282348 | Publisher : Routledge | Published : London
Reconceptualizing the Politics of Pockets of Effectiveness: A Power Domains Approach (2023-05-25)
Hickey, Sam and Mohan, Giles
In: Hickey, Sam ed. Pockets of Effectiveness and the Politics of State-building and Development in Africa (pp. 30-58)
ISBN : 9780191955402 | Publisher : Oxford University Press | Published : Oxford, UK
Structural Adjustment (2020)
Mohan, Giles and Chiyemura, Frangton
In: Kobayashi, Audrey ed. International Encyclopedia of Human Geography (pp. 61-69)
ISBN : 978-0-08-102296-2 | Publisher : Elsevier
The (im)possibility of Southern theory: the opportunities and challenges of cultural brokerage in co-producing knowledge about China-Africa relations (2019-05-24)
Mohan, Giles; Lampert, Ben; Tan-Mullins, May and Atta-Ankomah, Richmond
In: Mawdsley, Emma; Fourie, Elsje and Nauta, Wiebe eds. Researching South-South Development Cooperation: The Politics of Knowledge Production. Rethinking Development (pp. 12-26)
ISBN : 9780429459146 | Publisher : Routledge
A transformative presence? Chinese migrants as agents of change in Ghana and Nigeria (2018-10-25)
Lampert, Ben and Mohan, Giles
In: Giese, Karsten and Marfaing, Laurence eds. Chinese and African Entrepreneurs: Social Impacts of Interpersonal Encounters (pp. 147-169)
ISBN : 978-90-04-38742-3 | Publisher : Brill | Published : Leiden
Negotiating China: Reinserting African Agency into China-Africa Relations (2017-05-25)
Mohan, Giles and Lampert, Ben
In: Cheeseman, Nic; Whitfield, Lindsay and Death, Carl eds. The African Affairs Reader: Key Texts in Politics, Development and International Relations (pp. 336-353)
ISBN : 9780198794295 | Publisher : Oxford University Press | Published : Oxford
Les migrants chinois, acteurs de changement au Ghana et au Nigeria: une présence transformatrice ? (2016)
Lampert, Ben and Mohan, Giles
In: Giese, Karsten and Marfaing, Laurence eds. Entrepreneurs africains et chinois. Les impacts sociaux d’une rencontre particulière (pp. 207-236)
Publisher : Karthala | Published : Paris
Making Space for African Agency in China-Africa Engagements: Ghanaian and Nigerian Patrons Shaping Chinese Enterprise (2015-09)
Lampert, Ben and Mohan, Giles
In: Gadzala, Aleksandra W. ed. Africa and China: How Africans and Their Governments are Shaping Relations with China (pp. 109-126)
ISBN : 978-1-4422-3775-9 | Publisher : Rowman & Littlefield | Published : Lanham
China in Africa: impacts and prospects for accountable development (2014-12-11)
Mohan, Giles
In: Hickey, Sam; Sen, Kunal and Bukenya, Badru eds. The Politics of Inclusive Development: Interrogating the Evidence (pp. 279-304)
ISBN : 978-0-19-872256-4 | Publisher : Oxford University Press | Published : Oxford
Particpatory development (2014-03-12)
Mohan, Giles
In: Desai, Vandana and Potter, Robert eds. The Companion to Development Studies (3rd ed) (pp. 131-136)
ISBN : 978-0-415-82665-5 | Publisher : Routledge | Published : London
Migrants as agents of South-South Cooperation: the case of Chinese in Africa (2013-02-13)
Mohan, Giles
In: Dargin, Justin ed. The Rise Of The Global South: Philosophical, Geopolitical and Economic Trends of the 21st Century (pp. 283-322)
ISBN : 978-981-4397-80-3 | Publisher : World Scientific | Published : London
Rising powers (2012-11-08)
Mohan, Giles
In: Butcher, Melissa and Papaioannou, Theo eds. International Development in a Changing World (pp. 49-75)
ISBN : 978-1-7809-3237-8 | Publisher : Bloomsbury Academic | Published : London
The rising powers as drivers of development (2012-11-08)
Farooki, Masuma and Mohan, Giles
In: Butcher, Melissa and Papaioannou, Theo eds. International Development in a Changing World (pp. 99-123)
ISBN : 978-1-78093-234-7 | Publisher : Bloomsbury Academic | Published : London
Spaces of development: cities, mobilities and ecologies (2012-11)
Mohan, Giles and Butcher, Melissa
In: Papaioannou, Theo and Butcher, Melissa eds. International Development in a Changing World. International Development (1) (pp. 125-150)
ISBN : 978-1-78093-237-8 | Publisher : Bloomsbury Academic | Published : London
China and the geopolitical imagination of African ‘development’ (2010-07-30)
Power, Marcus and Mohan, Giles
In: Dent, Christopher M. ed. China and Africa Development Relations. Routledge Contemporary China Series (pp. 42-67)
ISBN : 978-0-415-56933-0 | Publisher : Routledge | Published : Abingdon, U.K and New York, NY, U.S.
Local and regional 'development studies' (2010)
Mohan, Giles
In: Pike, Andy; Rodríguez-Pose, Andres and Tomaney, John eds. Handbook of Local and Regional Development (pp. 43-55)
ISBN : 978-0-415-54831-1 | Publisher : Routledge | Published : London
Structural adjustment (2009)
Mohan, G.
In: Kitchin, R. and Thrift, N. eds. International Encyclopedia of Human Geography (pp. 1-9)
ISBN : 978-0-08-044911-1 | Publisher : Elsevier | Published : Oxford, UK
The politics of localization: from depoliticizing development to politicizing democracy (2008-12-18)
Mohan, Giles and Stokke, Kristian
In: Cox, Kevin; Low, Murray and Robinson, Jennifer eds. The SAGE Handbook of Political Geography (pp. 545-562)
ISBN : 9780761943273 | Publisher : Sage Publications | Published : London, UK
Participatory Development (2008)
Mohan, Giles
In: Desai, Vandana and Potter, Robert eds. The Arnold Companion to Development Studies, 2nd Edition
ISBN : 340889144 | Publisher : Edward Arnold | Published : London, UK
Beyond participation: strategies for deeper empowerment (2006-03-14)
Mohan, Giles
In: Cooke, Bill and Kothari, Uma eds. Participation: The New Tyranny? (pp. 153-167)
ISBN : 1856497933 | Publisher : Zed Books | Published : London
The Theories of the State/the State of Theories (2004)
Zack-Williams, Tunde and Mohan, Giles
In: Mohan, Giles and Zack-Willams, Tunde eds. The Politics of Transition: State, democracy and economic development in Africa
Publisher : James Currey
Rethinking institutions and embeddedness in a Third World context (2002-10)
Mohan, Giles
In: Taylor, Michael and Leonard, Simon eds. Embedded Enterprise and Social Capital: International Perspectives (pp. 37-55)
ISBN : 0-7546-1517-0 | Publisher : Ashgate | Published : UK
Diaspora and development: The Black Atlantic and African Transformation (2002-05)
Mohan, Giles
In: Robinson, Jenny ed. Development and Displacement (pp. 77-139)
ISBN : 0-1992-5507-5 | Publisher : Oxford University Press
Participatory development (2001-11-02)
Mohan, Giles
In: Desai, Vandana and Potter, Rob eds. The Arnold companion to development studies (pp. 49-54)
ISBN : 9780340760512 | Publisher : Hodder | Published : London, UK
Globalisation and Governance: The paradoxes of adjustment in Africa (1996)
Mohan, Giles
In: Kofman, Eleonore and Youngs, Gillian eds. Globalisation: Theory and practice (pp. 452-480)
ISBN : 1-85567-346-0 | Publisher : Pinter
Participation - from tyranny to transformation?: Exploring new approaches to participation in development (2006-04-14)
Hickey, Samuel and Mohan, Giles eds.
ISBN : 1842774603 | Publisher : Zed Books | Published : UK
Online, Blended and Distance Learning for Education in Fragile Contexts (2019)
Mohan, Giles; Taylor, Faye and Charitonos, Koula
In : PanCommonwealth Forum PCF9 (9-12 Sep 2019, Edinburgh)
Życie w obliczu inności, czyli: jak zrozumieć współczesne miasta [Living with difference: making sense of the contemporary city], (2015-07)
Cochrane, Allan; Neal, Sarah; Bennett, Katy and Mohan, Giles
In : Smart Metropolia (23-24 Oct 2014, Gdansk) (pp. 16-20)
Chinese migrants in Africa: bilateral and informal governance of a poorly understood South-South flow (2013)
Mohan, Giles and Lampert, Ben
In : Regional Governance of Migration and Socio-Political Rights: Institutions, Actors and Processes (14-15 Jan 2013, Geneva, Switzerland)