“…Sabaratnam, 2017; Hickel, 2017; de Jong et al , 2019; Kothari et al , 2019), including direct protests by dissatisfied people against development projects in their communities. Other responses have included quiet or slow dissent (Murrey, 2016) or begrudged acquiescence (Li, 2014). While there is no singular story of development, what we know of as “international development” writ large has been criticised as being ideologically and epistemologically informed by Eurocentric norms, priorities, “expert knowledge”, “fantasy” and “seductive logics” (Escobar, 1995; Hickel, 2017; Kothari et al , 2019).…”