Kryachkov 2!indd


Английский язык для магистратуры W


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Английский язык для магистратуры
W
riting a Research Proposal
2. REVIEW OF LITERATURE
STAGE 1
A literature review in a research proposal provides an overview of existing scholarship and explains 
how your proposed research will add to or alter the existing body of knowledge. Some regard it as 
one of the most important sections of the proposal. 
Ex. 1. Rank the following aims of the Review of Literature in order of importance:
1. 
to concisely summarize the findings that have emerged from prior research efforts on the 
subject;
2. to present your conclusion about how accurate and complete those findings are;
3. to present your considered judgments about what’s right, what’s wrong, what’s incon-
clusive, and what’s missing in the existing literature, which in the long run enables you 
4. to situate your proposed project in relation to existing knowledge. 
Ex. 2. Read the sample Reviews of Literature and answer the questions that follow.
A.
Somewhat surprisingly, the history of colonial development has been given scant attention by 
those scholars who are supposed to be most interested in it, that is those of Development Stud-
ies. That many of them neglect the colonial roots of their profession may be caused by a peculiar 
dichotomy prevailing within this field of research: development as something beneficial is strictly 
set apart from colonialism as something deeply disreputable, as Uma Kothari put it (2005:63). She 
is one of the very few within Development Studies who recently has started to reconstruct ‘the co-
lonial genealogies of development’ (2005:50). As an earlier, rare but very important exception, Al-
calde investigated the ‘idea of Third World development’ as it was put forward in the United States 
and Britain from 1900 to 1950 (1987). Serge Latouche, in a similar vein, wrote an essay on the same 
period from a French perspective (1988). Most explorations into the history of development take 
the late 1940s as their starting point, firmly tying it to decolonisation, the hegemonic role of the 
US towards the newly independent states, and the emergence of development theories accompa-
nying and rationalising this ascendancy (Oman/Wignaraja 1990; Meier 2005). 
Even those authors who do not skip colonialism altogether make only passing reference to 
it, mainly focusing on the League of Nations and its mandates system (Escobar 1995:26f; Kößler 
1998:81–84). Gilbert Rist stresses various continuities between colonial and contemporary devel-
opment policies and deplores the ‘amnesia’ affecting the colonial period (1997:56), but still calls 
Point Four of President Truman’s much-quoted 1949 Inaugural Speech the ‘invention of develop-
ment’ (1997:69). The majority of these historical sketches are written in the postdevelopmentalist 
vein, trying to prove the point that the concept of development is something inherently oppres-
sive. Small wonder that these accounts lack both ambition and analytical depth to do justice to 
the ambiguities and changes that showed over time — Cooper’s demand for ‘a more rigorous 
historical practice’ which he directs at postcolonial studies (2005:13) applies to the greater part of 
post-developmentalist approaches to history as well.
Apart from solitary contributions by other disciplines (Birnberg/Resnick 1975), it was mainly 
historiography which did the most to broaden our knowledge of the connections between colo-
nialism and development.
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