|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
In The Cost of Not Educating the World's Poor, Lynn Ilon observes
from her 30 years of travel and work in some 20 developing
countries, how global instability, problems of environmental
degradation, spread of global disease, migration and political
instability are a cost of viewing the uneducated poor as separated
from a networked of fast-growing global knowledge. This book shows
how powerful global learning systems are rapidly forming and
linking the rich world with the world of the poor and developing
nations. Using a narrative voice interleaved with concise
introductions to the underlying theories (economics, development,
learning, technology and networks) it shows us how changing our
ways of thinking can lead to new possibilities. The Cost of Not
Educating the World's Poor is based on an emerging theory of
development economics and the author's own vast experiences and
stories. It also discusses, among other issues: International
development and how it has evolved toward an emphasis on knowledge
How networked human capital creates new potential for poorly
resourced countries The formation of a global system of learning
networks The digitization of knowledge How nations improve their
well-being through knowledge and equity This inter-disciplinary
assessment of international learning inequality and the methods to
overcome it will appeal to researchers concerned with emerging
concepts of global learning networks and their effects on
development. It will also be of interest to students and
policymakers studying national inequality, economics, and global
development.
In The Cost of Not Educating the World's Poor, Lynn Ilon observes
from her 30 years of travel and work in some 20 developing
countries, how global instability, problems of environmental
degradation, spread of global disease, migration and political
instability are a cost of viewing the uneducated poor as separated
from a networked of fast-growing global knowledge. This book shows
how powerful global learning systems are rapidly forming and
linking the rich world with the world of the poor and developing
nations. Using a narrative voice interleaved with concise
introductions to the underlying theories (economics, development,
learning, technology and networks) it shows us how changing our
ways of thinking can lead to new possibilities. The Cost of Not
Educating the World's Poor is based on an emerging theory of
development economics and the author's own vast experiences and
stories. It also discusses, among other issues: International
development and how it has evolved toward an emphasis on knowledge
How networked human capital creates new potential for poorly
resourced countries The formation of a global system of learning
networks The digitization of knowledge How nations improve their
well-being through knowledge and equity This inter-disciplinary
assessment of international learning inequality and the methods to
overcome it will appeal to researchers concerned with emerging
concepts of global learning networks and their effects on
development. It will also be of interest to students and
policymakers studying national inequality, economics, and global
development.
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.