Linking-In through Education? Exploring the Educational Question in Africa from the Perspective of Flows and (dis) Connections

Education is the fourth Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) and considered an important gateway to many other SDGs being achieved. Education is, however, frequently interpreted in terms of its technical aspects, i.e., furthering skills and knowledge and strengthening human capital for promoting devel...

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Main Author: Mayke Kaag
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-02-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/2/496
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spelling doaj-9473739850b04e0890f6632788f218f62020-11-24T23:53:22ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-02-0110249610.3390/su10020496su10020496Linking-In through Education? Exploring the Educational Question in Africa from the Perspective of Flows and (dis) ConnectionsMayke Kaag0African Studies Centre Leiden, Wassenaarseweg 52, 2333 AK Leiden, The NetherlandsEducation is the fourth Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) and considered an important gateway to many other SDGs being achieved. Education is, however, frequently interpreted in terms of its technical aspects, i.e., furthering skills and knowledge and strengthening human capital for promoting development. By contrast, this paper focuses less on this technical aspect and instead analyses the current educational landscape in Africa as a field in which flows of investment, ideas, and people influence connections between Africans and the rest of the world. As an effect of the structural adjustment programs in the 1980s, public spending on education in many African countries went down, allowing private education initiatives to spring up. These were, for a large part, financed by Western and Arab countries. Over the last fifteen years, investment flows in education from emerging global powers like China, Brazil, Malaysia, and Turkey have contributed to an increasingly diversified educational landscape in Africa. This paper argues that these investments not only allow Africans to improve their educational levels but that these diverse forms of education also have an influence on connections and social orientations in African societies. Educational programs go together with specific worldviews. In addition, people develop their social networks through educational trajectories. Both orientations and connections influence people’s choices and opportunities in their further lives, and thus individual and societal development. Interestingly, often investments in education by external parties are not isolated endeavors, but also used as a means to get linked-in in local societies for such diverse purposes as religion or business interests. Illustrating my argument with examples taken from my research on Gulf charities and on Turkish schools in Africa, I will explore how the new connectivities that come with the changing educational landscape in Africa shape (possible) local development trajectories in the current era of intensified globalization characterized by intensified flows of capital, people, and ideas.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/2/496educationAfricaglobal connectionsflowsSenegalTurkey
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mayke Kaag
spellingShingle Mayke Kaag
Linking-In through Education? Exploring the Educational Question in Africa from the Perspective of Flows and (dis) Connections
Sustainability
education
Africa
global connections
flows
Senegal
Turkey
author_facet Mayke Kaag
author_sort Mayke Kaag
title Linking-In through Education? Exploring the Educational Question in Africa from the Perspective of Flows and (dis) Connections
title_short Linking-In through Education? Exploring the Educational Question in Africa from the Perspective of Flows and (dis) Connections
title_full Linking-In through Education? Exploring the Educational Question in Africa from the Perspective of Flows and (dis) Connections
title_fullStr Linking-In through Education? Exploring the Educational Question in Africa from the Perspective of Flows and (dis) Connections
title_full_unstemmed Linking-In through Education? Exploring the Educational Question in Africa from the Perspective of Flows and (dis) Connections
title_sort linking-in through education? exploring the educational question in africa from the perspective of flows and (dis) connections
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Education is the fourth Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) and considered an important gateway to many other SDGs being achieved. Education is, however, frequently interpreted in terms of its technical aspects, i.e., furthering skills and knowledge and strengthening human capital for promoting development. By contrast, this paper focuses less on this technical aspect and instead analyses the current educational landscape in Africa as a field in which flows of investment, ideas, and people influence connections between Africans and the rest of the world. As an effect of the structural adjustment programs in the 1980s, public spending on education in many African countries went down, allowing private education initiatives to spring up. These were, for a large part, financed by Western and Arab countries. Over the last fifteen years, investment flows in education from emerging global powers like China, Brazil, Malaysia, and Turkey have contributed to an increasingly diversified educational landscape in Africa. This paper argues that these investments not only allow Africans to improve their educational levels but that these diverse forms of education also have an influence on connections and social orientations in African societies. Educational programs go together with specific worldviews. In addition, people develop their social networks through educational trajectories. Both orientations and connections influence people’s choices and opportunities in their further lives, and thus individual and societal development. Interestingly, often investments in education by external parties are not isolated endeavors, but also used as a means to get linked-in in local societies for such diverse purposes as religion or business interests. Illustrating my argument with examples taken from my research on Gulf charities and on Turkish schools in Africa, I will explore how the new connectivities that come with the changing educational landscape in Africa shape (possible) local development trajectories in the current era of intensified globalization characterized by intensified flows of capital, people, and ideas.
topic education
Africa
global connections
flows
Senegal
Turkey
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/2/496
work_keys_str_mv AT maykekaag linkinginthrougheducationexploringtheeducationalquestioninafricafromtheperspectiveofflowsanddisconnections
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