This pioneering study argues that the bitter civil war that
thrust Zimbabwe into international headlines from 1966 to 1979 had
its roots in the reports issued by the colonial commissions of
inquiry into education. As the author explains in his introduction,
these commissions and the reports they issued, which reinforced
separate educational systems for African and white students,
reached far beyond educational policy in their effects. Basing his
work on original documents and materials which have not appeared in
print before--most of which were only recently declassified by the
government of Zimbabwe--the author shows the profound influence
these reports had on government policy, on government control of
opportunity in general, and on the relationships between and among
institutions within the country.
Following an introductory overview, Mungazi turns to a
discussion of the specific issues which the commissions were
appointed to investigate. Separate chapters are then devoted to the
circumstances surrounding the naming of commissions, their findings
and recommendations, and the implications of implementing their
recommendations on the character of colonial society itself. This
chronological treatment enables the author to focus particularly on
how the recommendations of the commissions constituted a sequence
of developments that led inevitably to conflict. The final chapter
draws some conclusions regarding the social environment that
produced a major national conflict and discusses what might be
learned from the tragic events that took place in Zimbabwe from
1966 to 1979.
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