In this "case study of the World Bank's reaction to Leslye Obiora, the former Minister of Mines and Steel Development for the Federal Republic of Nigeria, when she rejected a $120 million World Bank loan that she deemed to be usurious" (http://escholarship.org/uc/item/68b6p6q1) you will find the passage below:
Those elites from the Global South who don't enter with a Western education and happen to have modalities of understanding poverty, inequity, and economic development that aren't consistent with the neo-liberal Washington Consensus, are frequently subject to the process of "transformismo." In this regard, Robert Cox's discussion is worth quoting at length:
Elite talent from peripheral countries is co-opted into international institutions in the
manner of transformismo. Individuals from peripheral countries, though they may come
to international institutions with the idea of working from within to change the system,
are condemned to work within the structures of the passive revolution. At the best they
will help transfer elements of "modernization" to the peripheries but only as these are
consistenti the interests of the established local powers. Hegemony is like a pillow: it
absorbs blows and sooner or later the would-be assailant finds is comfortable to rest
upon. Only where representation in international institutions is firmly based upon an
articulate social and political challenge to hegemony—upon a nascent historical bloc
and counter-hegemony—could participation pose a real threat. The co-optation of
outstanding individuals from the peripheries renders this less likely.25
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