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Professor David  Lewis

Professor David Lewis

Affiliated Anthropologist

Department of Anthropology

Languages
Bengali, English
Key Expertise
South Asia, Bangladesh

About me

David Lewis is professor of anthropology and development in the ½ûÂþÌìÌÃ’s Department of International Development. His research has been mostly focused on South Asia and Bangladesh in particular, where he conducted village level fieldwork on technology and agrarian change for his PhD. David’s subsequent research has explored the interface between , such as understanding how ‘development’ is experienced by those on the receiving end of , anthropological analysis of (NGOs) and civil society, and .

Recent collaborative research has explored the ethnography of small-scale in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, while David’s ongoing work is concerned with the relationship between policy and the past, and he is currently writing a book on ‘policy amnesia’. He has also provided consultancy advice to a wide range of international development agencies including the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida), the UK Department for International Development (DFID), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Oxfam GB and BRAC Bangladesh.

Expertise Details

South Asia; Bangladesh; civil society; non-governmental organizations (NGOs); development aid; rural development; anthropology of policy.

Selected publications

David’s books include (edited with David Mosse, Kumarian, 2006), (Cambridge, 2011), (with K. Gardner, Pluto, 2015) and (co-edited with Dennis Rodgers and Michael Woolcock, Oxford, 2022).