Networks, Globalization, and World Bank Education Strategies

Development strategies of International Financial Institutions (IFIs), such as education strategies of the World Bank, advance globalization in part by promoting networks as organizational forms in public services and wider society. Networks are inherently decentralizing and are becoming the dominan...

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Main Author: James McKenzie Ferguson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: New Proposals Publishing Society 2019-05-01
Series:New Proposals
Online Access:https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/newproposals/article/view/187519
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spelling doaj-4e44188f25ff4a90b0095c76aa471bd52020-11-25T01:15:44ZengNew Proposals Publishing SocietyNew Proposals 1715-67182019-05-01101Networks, Globalization, and World Bank Education StrategiesJames McKenzie FergusonDevelopment strategies of International Financial Institutions (IFIs), such as education strategies of the World Bank, advance globalization in part by promoting networks as organizational forms in public services and wider society. Networks are inherently decentralizing and are becoming the dominant organizational form due to advances in Information and Communication Technologies (ICT). The work of Karl Marx (interpreted through David Harvey), Manuel Castells, and Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari provide new insights into the use of ICT and networks as a social organizational form. Technology does not determine society, but reveals our relations to nature, production, and reproduction, our social relations, and our mental conceptions. These relations are dialectic in the Marxian sense that we cannot change the world around us without also changing ourselves. World Bank education strategies advance a networked type of education system, and impose a new form of discipline, to facilitate the emergence of a knowledge economy. However, the World Bank does not include our relation to nature in these strategies, and the strategies lack detail concerning modes of production and reproduction – essential to knowing why education is necessary. A more comprehensive understanding of the network form and ICT can contribute to critiques of development discourses in education reform and modes of being in the world.https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/newproposals/article/view/187519
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James McKenzie Ferguson
spellingShingle James McKenzie Ferguson
Networks, Globalization, and World Bank Education Strategies
New Proposals
author_facet James McKenzie Ferguson
author_sort James McKenzie Ferguson
title Networks, Globalization, and World Bank Education Strategies
title_short Networks, Globalization, and World Bank Education Strategies
title_full Networks, Globalization, and World Bank Education Strategies
title_fullStr Networks, Globalization, and World Bank Education Strategies
title_full_unstemmed Networks, Globalization, and World Bank Education Strategies
title_sort networks, globalization, and world bank education strategies
publisher New Proposals Publishing Society
series New Proposals
issn 1715-6718
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Development strategies of International Financial Institutions (IFIs), such as education strategies of the World Bank, advance globalization in part by promoting networks as organizational forms in public services and wider society. Networks are inherently decentralizing and are becoming the dominant organizational form due to advances in Information and Communication Technologies (ICT). The work of Karl Marx (interpreted through David Harvey), Manuel Castells, and Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari provide new insights into the use of ICT and networks as a social organizational form. Technology does not determine society, but reveals our relations to nature, production, and reproduction, our social relations, and our mental conceptions. These relations are dialectic in the Marxian sense that we cannot change the world around us without also changing ourselves. World Bank education strategies advance a networked type of education system, and impose a new form of discipline, to facilitate the emergence of a knowledge economy. However, the World Bank does not include our relation to nature in these strategies, and the strategies lack detail concerning modes of production and reproduction – essential to knowing why education is necessary. A more comprehensive understanding of the network form and ICT can contribute to critiques of development discourses in education reform and modes of being in the world.
url https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/newproposals/article/view/187519
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