Prof raphael kaplinsky biography
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Raphie Kaplinsky
English professor
Raphael Kaplinsky | |
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Kaplinsky in 2022 | |
| Born | (1946-12-31) 31 December 1946 (age 78) South Africa |
| Spouse | Catherine |
| Children | 2, including Natasha Kaplinsky, Benjamin Jacob Kaplinsky |
| Institutions | SPRU, University of Sussex |
| Website | https://raphiekaplinsky.com/ |
Raphael Malcolm Kaplinsky (born 31 December 1946)[1][2] is an Honorary Professor at the Science Policy Research Unit and an Emeritus Professorial Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex.[3] In 2024 he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. He was an active and well-known opponent to Apartheid in South Africa during the 1960s, and played a leading role in 1968 in the Mafeje affair. Kaplinsky was not allowed to return to his country of birth until Nelson Mandela was released from prison in 1990, after which he played an active role in policy developm
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Professor Raphael Kaplinsky
Publications
Journal articles
Introduction to the special section celebrating the hundraårsdag of Chris Freeman's birth (2022-03)
Kaplinsky, Raphael and Steinmueller, W. Edward
Research Policy, 51, Article 104449(2)
Inclusive innovation: an architecture for policy development (2014)
Chataway, Jo; Hanlin, Rebecca and Kaplinsky, Raphael
Innovation and Development, 4(1) (pp. 33-54)
‘‘One thing leads to another’’—Commodities, linkages and industrial development (2012-12)
Morris, Mike; Kaplinsky, Raphael and Kaplan, David
Resources Policy, 37(4) (pp. 408-416)
The impact of China on low and middle income countries’ varor för utland prices in industrial-country markets (2012-08)
Fu, Xiaolan; Kaplinsky, Raphael and Zhang, Jing
World Development, 40(8) (pp. 1483-1496)
What are the implications for global value chains when the marknad shifts from the north to the south? (2011-08-16)
Kaplinsky, Raphael and Farooki, Masuma
International Journal of Technological Le
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Contact
Sustainable Futures An Agenda for Action
Long before the pandemic, economies across the world were in trouble, with growth slowing across the board. This downturn coincided with growing inequality and social exclusion. Rising political dissatisfaction with ruling elites fuelled the rise of populism. Add to this the alarming environmental emergency and few can deny we live in a time of multiple sustainability crises.
While this conclusion can lead to despair, in this broad-ranging book Raphael Kaplinsky, a leading development policy analyst, argues that the future is not necessarily bleak. Interrogating the causes and nature of the systemic crises we are living through, he shows how the challenges which we now face mirror previous historical epochs, in which dominant ‘techno-economic’ paradigms flourish, mature and run into crisis. In each case, decisive action is required to move to a more economically and socially sustainable world. In our time, we are witnessing the e