This document outlines the structure and objectives of a lecture on the World Bank. It discusses the Bank's founding principles and evolution of its policies over time. The lecture covers the Bank's initial project-based lending in the 1950s-60s, its introduction of structural adjustment policies in the 1980s in response to state-led development failures, and its current focus on building capitalist states and integrating populations into the global capitalist system through its "post-Washington consensus". The document raises conceptual issues around analyzing the Bank's relationship with client states and its role as part of the broader project of extending capitalist disciplines worldwide.