The Education Alibi
Tracing Education's Entanglements Across Contemporary Africa
Contributor(s)
Cooper, Elizabeth (editor)
Alber, Erdmute (editor)
Njoya, Wandia (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
Education is generally promoted as the key to the future of Africa in global development discourses about the continent. Education’s official story in Africa continues to be one of innocence and public good, yet, since colonial times, education has constituted an area of intense contestation. The Education Alibi asks if it is possible that while claiming to be doing one thing, education has also been doing another in African communities. The concept of the “alibi” shines an interrogative light on institutions’ and actors’ use of education to divert scrutiny from other effects. Through ethnographic research and critical analysis across the continent, this volume focuses on people’s lived experiences to demonstrate how contemporary education systems in fact deepen economic, racialized, gendered, urban-rural, linguistic, religious, and other intranational and international inequalities.
Keywords
education, critical education studies, global education, education for all, Africa, anthropology of education, anthropology of contemporary Africa, international development, inequality, education systems, African education, teaching, learning, literacy, discrimination, school, inequityDOI
10.3998/mpub.14417360ISBN
9780472905348, 9780472905348, 9780472077755, 9780472057757Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
https://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2025Series
African Perspectives,Classification
History
African history
Educational strategies and policy


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