Our Aims and Objectives

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

Find Out More

What is Development Studies

What is development studies and decolonising development.

Find Out More

Our Members

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

Find Out More

Governance

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

Find Out More

People

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

Find Out More

About

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

Find Out More

DSA2025

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

Find Out More

Past Conferences

Find out about our previous conferences

Find Out More

Study Groups

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

Find Out More

Students and ECRs

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

Find Out More

Publications

Our book series with OUP and our relationship with other publishers

Find Out More

Decolonising Development

The initiatives we are undertaking that work towards decolonising development studies

Find Out More

Membership Directory

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

Find Out More

London School of Economics (LSE)

LSE – November 2024

LSE – November 2024

Including publications on climate change and science technology studies' digital silk road; UK aid post Brexit and COVID19. And more.

Read Now
LSE – October 2024

LSE – October 2024

Including publications on pregnancy recognition trajectories; reproductive geography of miscarriages; welfare and accumulation; regional bloc voting in Africa and rural-urban clientelist networks.

Read Now
LSE – September 2024

LSE – September 2024

A new book on the UK's DFID; a novel based on LSE prof's experience as a political prisoner in South Africa; plus a podcast on the impacts of colonial forced labour today.

Read Now

Past News