@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00005878, author = {山田, 美和 and Yamada, Miwa}, journal = {国際開発研究フォーラム, Forum of International Development Studies}, month = {Mar}, note = {The World Bank's legal and judical reforms programs have expanded considerably since it began to address the concept of governance in early 1990's. Initially the Bank focused primarily on legal reforms for inducing private investment. Currently, however, the Bank's specialized legal assistance extends to include the criminal justice sector such as anti-money laundering. Such activities cannot be directly construed from the functions provided \
for in its Articles of Agreement, the main among which is to help financing specific projects for productive purposes. Examining the documents by the Bank and its General Counsel, the author discusses how the Bank has interpreted its Articles in order to explain the legitimacy of its expanding activities. The Bank has manoeuvred itself into the criminal justice sector by skillfully changing its coccept of development not to deviate from its mandate. The change is not merely a shift of its emphasis from economic development to social development; rather, an 'evolution' to include any kind of areas as target of its development assistance. For those who study Law and Development, it raises a question of one's own concept of development to explore the concept of development deployed by the World Bank, a major influential player in legal and judicial reforms in developing countries.}, pages = {35--51}, title = {「進化」する開発概念 : 世界銀行の反マネーロンダリング支援を題材に}, volume = {34}, year = {2007} }