Doris Sommer, Ira Jewell Williams, Jr. Professor of Romance Languages, Literature and African and African American Studies Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences will co-teach GENED 1011 Contemporary Developing Countries: Entrepreneurial Solutions to Intractable Problems in the fall. Be sure to sign up for a preview session below and watch the intro video.
What problems do developing countries face, and how can individuals contribute to solutions rather than awaiting the largesse of the state or other actors? Intractable problems – such as lack of access to education and healthcare, forced reliance on contaminated food, deep-seated corruption – are part of the quotidian existence of the vast majority of five of the world’s seven billion people. Developing societies suffer from what we refer to as ‘institutional voids’ that make organized activities of all sorts difficult; think of the mundane but important physical infrastructure that allows us to get to work or school in the developed world, as well as our access to higher-order institutions such as the availability of information at our fingertips or the security of the rule of law. The course demonstrates that reflecting upon the nature of the developing world’s intractable problems through different lenses helps characterize candidate interventions to address them. The scientist’s hypothesis-driven and iterative experimentation, the artist’s imagined counterfactuals through putting oneself in others’ shoes literally and theatrically, and the planner’s top-down articulation of boundary conditions, all tailor the ultimate solution.
Preview Sessions Zoom Links
Tuesday, August 18 - 2:00 pm - 2:30 pm EST
Tuesday, August 18 - 2:30 pm - 3:00 pm EST
Thursday, August 20 - 10:00 am - 10:30 am EST
Thursday, August 20 - 10:30 am - 11:00 am EST
View Intro Video: