Our Aims and Objectives

We are the UK association for all those who research, study and teach global development issues

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What is Development Studies

What is development studies and decolonising development.

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Our Members

We have around 1,000 members, made up of individuals and around 40 institutions

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Governance

Find out about our constitution, how we are run and meet our Council

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People

Meet our Council members and other staff who support the running of DSA

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About

The DSA Conference is an annual event which brings together the development studies community

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DSA2025

Our conference this year is themed "Navigating crisis: dangers and opportunities in development"

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Past Conferences

Find out about our previous conferences

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Study Groups

Our Study Groups offer a chance to connect with others who share your areas of interest

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Students and ECRs

Students and early career researchers are an important part of our community

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Publications

Our book series with OUP and our relationship with other publishers

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Decolonising Development

The initiatives we are undertaking that work towards decolonising development studies

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Membership Directory

Find out who our members are, where they are based and the issues they work on

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Cambridge Workshop: Teaching Qualitative Research Methods for Development Studies

In December 2019, Dr Georgia Cole, Research Fellow at the Margaret Anstee Centre for Global Studies at Newnham College Cambridge, organised a workshop to explore the problems, pedagogical approaches and best practices for teaching research methods to development studies students. The workshop was co-funded by the DSA and the Margaret Anstee Centre.

Inspired by the workshop’s two days of stimulating discussion, Dr Rama Dieng and Dr Ann Wagner put together a blog post which they hope will be a starting point for a discussion with fellow lecturers and teachers of Development Studies, as well as a prompt for more experienced colleagues to share their insights. You can read their blog at the futureproof collective.