01295pab a2200169 454500008004000000100001600040245003800056260000900094300001400103362000800117520083700125650001500962773001700977909001000994999001701004952010401021180718b2004 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aCooke, Bill aThe managing of the (Third) world c2004 ap.603-29. aSep aThis paper is about the relationship between management, a First World discipline, and the Third World. Management is widely assumed to apply in organizations in modern, or postmodern, societies. However, a distinctive form of management, Development Administration and Management (DAM), exists and is applied to Third World nation-states, which are deemed in the First World to require modernization. This article sets out the Institutional and conceptual separation and crossover between management and DAM. It then goes on to consider DAM in practice, demonstrating how it, and through it management, are complicit in neo-liberal World Bank interventions in the Third World. It concludes by reviewing the implications of the status of DAM, and management, as direct instruments of national-level neo-liberal change. - Reproduced. aManagement aOrganization a62642 c62642d62642 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 11, Issue no: 5pAR63092r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR