Education Denied: Costs and Remedies

Sprednja platnica
Zed Books, 2003 - 205 strani

This unique contribution to global educational debate and policymaking aims to highlight the adverse impacts on children and young people of not having access to effective formal education. The author is the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Education. In reviewing the emerging commitment to universal education and the difficult history of trying to give effect to this commitment, particularly in the past half century, the author draws on three bodies of literature - on education specifically, on the development process generally, and on human rights. Her intention is to develop an approach which shifts the debate from sheer numbers of pupils, funding mechanisms and the recent preoccupation with market forces to a deeper discussion about what the right to education should really comprise, how governments and other institutions actually go about, or fail in, giving effect to it on a universal and non-discriminatory basis, and what happens to young people within the educational process itself.

The book is an indispensable tour d'horizon of the history and problems encountered in the global quest for universal education. It also points up the discrimination and abuses of power this quest has involved and what needs now to be done.

 

Vsebina

List of Boxes
viii
List of Figures
ix
List of Credits
xi
Preface and Antiacknowledgements
xiii
Introduction
1
WHY THE RIGHT TO EDUCATION?
7
Why Do We Need Safeguards Against Denials and Abuses of Education by Governments?
9
Education is a taxpayerfunded government monopoly
15
Fuzzy vocabulary and governance to match
99
Can impoverished basic education help eliminate poverty?
101
Painfully Visible Loss of the Right to Education Transfigured University
108
From free public service to freely traded service
111
What is todays price of a university?
115
Braindrain and braingain
118
PUTTING HUMAN RIGHTS BACK
123
Exposing and Opposing Exclusion
125

The Economics off the Right to Education
22
Why primary education was made free and compulsory
24
Blaming poverty rather than policy choices
27
why people are not human capital
32
The Promise of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights
36
Enter the right to education
41
Safeguards against the denial of education
42
Preventing abuse of education
44
Continental European models
46
The AngloAmerican model
47
The Core Contents of the Right to Education
51
Free and compulsory education
53
Parental freedom of choice
55
Nondiscrimination
57
Aims and purposes of education
60
WestEast NorthSouth
64
RUPTURING THE GLOBAL CONSENSUS
67
Enter the World Bank Changing the Parameters off the Debate
69
trialanderror in Malawi
72
The message of street protests
77
The Impoverishment of Public Education and its Cost
83
The plunge in public finance
85
A race towards the bottom line
86
The educational price of the end of the Cold War
89
Unwilling Unable or UnlikeMinded? Creators of Global Education Strategy
93
Consensus as a recipe for inaction
97
pinpointing government obligations
128
Rupturing global inaction
132
Rescuing education from debt bondage
133
Ugandas success story
136
Will it work in Tanzania?
139
Revisiting Segregated Education
143
Religious and secular schooling
148
The ripple effects of the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran
149
Creationism versus evolutionism in the USA
150
Overcoming the heritage of defectology
151
Rightsbased Education as a Pathway to Gender Equality
158
Two faces of gender disparity
163
Childmothers
165
Countering denials of womens rights
166
Adapting education to girls equal rights
169
Human Rights Safeguards in Education
172
the language of instruction
174
Shooting the messengers? Obstacles to teachers rights
177
Censorship of textbooks
181
Summing Up Human Rights through Education
187
A look back
188
Recognizing human rights violations in education
190
Violence and education violence in education
193
Confronting the transmission of discrimination through education
195
INDEX
200
Avtorske pravice

Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse

Pogosti izrazi in povedi

O avtorju (2003)

Katarina Tomasevski is Professor of International Law and International Relations at Lund University and External Lecturer at the Centre for African Studies of Copenhagen University.

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