Throughout the 1990s an ambitious global process of policy
making was associated with the work of UN agencies which believed
that global co-ordination and connection was key to dealing with a
range of pressing challenges. Gender inequality in education and
poverty reduction featured prominently in these concerns and in
attendant policy. As 2010 approached and commentators could look
back at ten years of the MDG process, a large number of studies
were published assessing the successes or difficulties with this
framework. However few looked at how it had been interpreted in
particular national and sub-national contexts or how staff in
different organisations operating at a global level viewed this
approach.
This book contributes to filling the gap in the empirical
literature. Drawing on case-study research that examined
initiatives which engaged with global aspirations to advance gender
equality in and through schooling in contexts of poverty in Kenya
and South Africa, it looks at how global frameworks on gender,
education and poverty are interpreted in local settings and the
politics of implementation. It thus sets discussion of the form of
global agreements in a particular context, which allows for an
appraisal of how they have been understood by the people who
implement them. In using an innovative approach to comparative
cross country research it illuminates how ideas and actions connect
and disconnect around particular meanings of poverty, education and
gender in large systems and different settings. Its conclusions
will allow assessments of the approach to the post-2015 agenda to
be made taking account of how policy and practice relating to
global social justice are negotiated, sometimes negated, the forms
in which they are affirmed and the actions that might help enhance
them.
This book will be valuable for students, researchers, academics,
senior teachers, senior government and inter-government officials
and senior staff in NGOs working in the field of education and
international development, gender, poverty reduction, and social
development. It should be of particular interest to students and
academics studying and researching in education, economics,
international relations, social policy, African area studies,
Development Studies, Women s Studies.
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