Decolonizing Development: The Role of Anthropology in Rethinking Humanitarian Aid

Challenging the Development Paradigm

For decades, international development efforts have been predominantly conceptualized and led by institutions based in the Global North. While these initiatives are often framed as benevolent endeavors aimed at alleviating poverty and improving living conditions in the Global South, they frequently reinforce existing power imbalances by imposing top-down models that marginalize local knowledge, ignore historical contexts, and limit community agency.

Anthropology, as a discipline fundamentally concerned with understanding human behavior within specific cultural contexts, offers powerful tools to challenge and dismantle these dynamics. Through its ethnographic methods and commitment to cultural relativism, anthropology enables development practitioners to engage more ethically and effectively with the communities they aim to support.

A landmark critique of traditional development discourse comes from anthropologist James Ferguson, whose influential book The Anti-Politics Machine (1990) examines World Bank programs in Lesotho during the 1980s. Ferguson argues that development discourse often functions to depoliticize inherently political issues, framing structural inequalities as technical problems in need of neutral solutions. This framing effectively silences local voices and erases the historical roots of underdevelopment, particularly those tied to colonialism and global capitalism.

For instance, Lesotho was portrayed in development documents as a remote, subsistence-based economy ripe for modernization. In reality, its economy was deeply linked with labor migration to South Africa, a fact that aid planners either overlooked or intentionally disregarded. The result was the implementation of aid projects that were not only irrelevant but often harmful, reinforcing state bureaucracies and external control mechanisms rather than empowering local communities.

Anthropologist Malighetti echoes Ferguson’s critique, emphasizing the symbolic use of quotation marks around the word “development” to underscore its constructed and often misleading nature. According to Malighetti, the very language of development can obscure the unequal power relations that underpin it, masking the interests of donors and international institutions behind a facade of neutrality.

Despite these critiques, many development agencies have historically continued to implement policies based on simplified, one-size-fits-all models. By treating underdevelopment as a purely technical failure they have consistently overlooked the historical, political, and cultural underpinnings of inequality. Ferguson argues that such programs ultimately serve to expand bureaucratic and donor influence rather than to foster meaningful change.

Anthropological perspectives serve as a counterbalance to these dominant narratives by reframing development not as a linear process of modernization, but as a contested, culturally embedded practice. Rather than viewing communities as passive recipients of aid, anthropology centers on lived experience, local worldviews, and social relations. Ethnographic fieldwork enables anthropologists to engage directly with communities, uncovering how people define their own needs and aspirations—often in ways that contradict external assumptions.

This approach reveals the limitations of universal development models that attempt to apply standardized solutions without regard for local complexities. Anthropology advocates instead for a plurality of knowledge systems, recognizing that no single framework can adequately address the diversity of human experiences.

Towards Community-Led Alternatives

Beyond critique, anthropology also offers practical frameworks for crafting more inclusive, community-centered development interventions. Participatory methods—such as Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA), community mapping, and storytelling—empower local populations to articulate their own priorities and co-create solutions that reflect their values and aspirations.

One compelling example is the Barefoot College in Rajasthan, India. Founded in 1972 by social activist Bunker Roy, this grassroots organization trains rural women—many of whom are illiterate or have limited formal education—to become solar engineers, water testers, educators, and health workers. These women then return to their communities with practical skills that bring renewable energy and essential services to villages often overlooked by conventional aid projects.

The Barefoot College turns traditional notions of expertise on their head. Instead of relying on foreign consultants or technocrats, it places trust in local capacities and fosters a model of development rooted in empowerment, sustainability, and cultural respect. It also challenges gender norms by investing in women’s leadership and decision-making. Graduates of the program return home not only with technical knowledge but also with a renewed sense of dignity and agency, catalyzing long-term, community-driven transformation.

Indigenous Philosophies and Alternative Futures

Anthropology also draws attention to indigenous philosophies that offer powerful alternatives to Western-centric development frameworks. One such example is the concept of Buen Vivir (“good living”), rooted in Andean cosmologies. Unlike traditional development models focused on GDP growth and material accumulation, Buen Vivir emphasizes harmony with nature, collective well-being, and spiritual balance.

Institutionalized in the constitutions of Bolivia and Ecuador, Buen Vivir serves as a radical critique of capitalist development, inviting us to rethink what constitutes a good life. It shifts the emphasis from profit to sustainability, from individual gain to communal health. Anthropologists engaging with such worldviews help surface the multiple ways people imagine progress—ways that are often obscured or devalued in mainstream discourse.

These examples collectively call for a reassessment of what we mean by “progress.” When development is narrowly defined through economic indicators or technological benchmarks, it tends to erase the diversity of human experience and de-legitimize other ways of knowing. Anthropology resists this erasure by championing epistemic plurality, asserting that multiple forms of knowledge—including oral traditions, indigenous cosmologies, and experiential learning—deserve equal recognition and respect.

This approach aligns with broader efforts to decolonize development, which not only involve addressing material inequalities but also challenging hierarchies in knowledge production and representation.

Some humanitarian organizations have begun to incorporate anthropological insights into their work. For instance, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has collaborated with anthropologists to navigate cultural sensitivities in healthcare delivery. In settings where biomedical practices may clash with local beliefs, anthropologists act as cultural mediators, facilitating more respectful and effective interactions between aid workers and local populations.

These interdisciplinary partnerships demonstrate how anthropology can enhance both the ethical and practical dimensions of humanitarian aid. By embedding cultural understanding into program design, humanitarian responses become not only more inclusive but also more impactful.

Moreover, anthropology promotes reflexivity—the ability to critically examine one’s own assumptions, positionality, and influence. Development practitioners trained in anthropological thinking are better equipped to interrogate their roles, challenge the legitimacy of external expertise, and foster genuinely collaborative relationships with communities.

In conclusion, anthropology plays a vital role in challenging dominant development paradigms and envisioning alternative futures. By centering local voices, historical consciousness, and cultural diversity, the discipline offers tools for designing development interventions that are not only more effective but also more just.

Decolonizing development involves more than tweaking policy; it requires a fundamental rethinking of how we define progress, how we exercise power, and how we value knowledge. As global inequalities persist and the climate crisis deepens, the insights offered by anthropology are more relevant than ever. They remind us that truly sustainable development begins not with prescriptions, but with listening, respect, and a commitment to shared humanity.

Federica Gatti is MA STUDENT ANTHROPOLOGY, UNIVERSITY OF MILAN – BICOCCA, DDRN INTERN