Desire and Decline: Schooling Amid Crisis in TanzaniaDesire and Decline explores the privileged place of education in local, national, and global development discourses about population, HIV/AIDS, and environmental conservation. ĞDesireğ signals the global consensus on the view that education is central to solving problems of development. ĞDeclineğ, on the other hand, draws attention to the growing gap between those who have access to basic social services - such as education - and those who do not. Based on multiple periods of fieldwork on Mount Kilimanjaro, Frances Vavrus links local and global narratives about the potential of education to enhance development but also reveals its limitations in postcolonial countries experiencing the pressures of globalization. Vavrus concludes with portraits of local development initiatives that leave readers with a clear sense of the complexity of education's role in development, and the importance of political economic analysis for global population, health, and environmental policy. |
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Page 113
The new administration also sought ways to meet the needs of the majority in ways that fit with the rural development philosophy of ujamaa . In the agriculture sector , the government provided subsidized agricultural inputs ( e.g. ...
The new administration also sought ways to meet the needs of the majority in ways that fit with the rural development philosophy of ujamaa . In the agriculture sector , the government provided subsidized agricultural inputs ( e.g. ...
Page 115
It also calls for greater community participation to achieve its objectives because the role of the state is limited to providing knowledge and advice as “ a facilitator , regulator , and promoter of rural and urban water supply and ...
It also calls for greater community participation to achieve its objectives because the role of the state is limited to providing knowledge and advice as “ a facilitator , regulator , and promoter of rural and urban water supply and ...
Page 117
In a country where only 2 % of rural residents have piped water in their homes , people have learned to use water with care because it is a labor - intensive task to collect it each day ( Bureau of Statistics Tanzania and Macro ...
In a country where only 2 % of rural residents have piped water in their homes , people have learned to use water with care because it is a labor - intensive task to collect it each day ( Bureau of Statistics Tanzania and Macro ...
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Contents
International Development and | 25 |
Transformations in Schooling | 45 |
Condoms Are the Devil and the Culture | 65 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
activities addition African agricultural AIDS asked attention capital Chagga chapter coffee colonial completed concerns continue cost cultural decline described desire discourses discussed economic effects employment environmental especially example explain family planning farming fees female fertility focus group Form four furrow further gender girls global graduates HIV/AIDS important improve increase institutions interview Kilimanjaro Kilimanjaro Region land living look means mountain NGOs Njema noted officials Old Moshi organizations parents participation past person political population practice present primary school problems production promote questions Region relations reproductive role rural secondary school sexual shillings social societies suggest survey Tanzania teach teachers Third World tion University views villages women World Bank young youth