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El. knyga: Education, Gender and Development: A Capabilities Perspective

(University of Jyväskylä, Finland)

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This compelling book takes a novel approach to the complexities of girls’ and women’s education in the global South. To unravel the critical issues and processes behind educational advancement and to identify the factors that support the construction of educational well-being and agency from gender perspective, the book narrates the stories of women who have successfully built their educational careers to higher education. The book creatively applies the human development and capabilities approach to analyze and assess educational advancement and development.

Mari-Anne Okkolin offers a fresh voice to the field of education, gender and development. The book draws on rich, in-depth evidence from Tanzanian women who have reached higher education, placing them amongst the very small percentage of women in the Tanzanian and sub-Saharan contexts. The book explores the women’s school experiences, everyday life practices and familial arrangements, and the values, expectations and assumptions associated with education and the schooling of girls and women.

Due to the multi-disciplinary nature of the book, it will be of great interest to multiple academic audiences: post-graduates, researchers and academics. It is of particular relevance for all those interested in education, sociology, development studies, gender/women’s studies, and qualitative research methodology. The book will appeal especially to scholars working with the capabilities approach. It will also be of value beyond academia, for education practitioners in planning and implementing education and equality policies internationally.

List of Illustrations
x
Acknowledgements xi
List of Abbreviations
xiii
PART I Setting the Scene
1(40)
1 Introduction
3(6)
2 Why and How to Address Education, Gender and Development
9(5)
3 Introducing the Ten Highly Educated Women
14(4)
4 Introducing the Empirical Study
18(23)
Pre-Study -- Policy Informed Understanding
18(2)
Collecting Women's Narratives
20(2)
Analysing Women's Narratives -- Voice-Centered Relational Method
22(2)
Methodological Premises and Reflexive Accounts -- Some Remarks
24(17)
PART II Education, Gender and Development
41(74)
5 Research on Education, Gender and Development
43(25)
School Environment
44(8)
Demand for Female Education in Families and Communities
52(6)
Assessing Gender Equality and Equity in Education
58(10)
6 Gendered Educational Challenges and Achievements in the Tanzanian Context
68(23)
Historical Glimpse
68(4)
Politics of Equity, Access and Quality in Education
72(1)
Recent Reforms: Primary and Secondary Education
73(8)
Gender and Higher Education
81(2)
`Why Haven't More of These Actions Been Implemented?'
83(8)
7 Capabilities Lenses to Address and Assess Education, Gender and Development
91(24)
Core Idea and Key Concepts
91(6)
Equality of What?
97(2)
Analytical Adaptation of the Approach in the Study
99(16)
PART III Women's Many Stories
115(104)
8 Educational Well-being in Schools
117(45)
Leyla's Story
117(2)
Costs of Schooling
119(3)
Physical School Environment
122(9)
Human Relations
131(6)
Learning Environment
137(12)
`Yah, We Used to Work All the Time'
149(13)
9 Enabling Social and Familial Environment
162(35)
`Us'
164(16)
`They'
180(7)
`Because I am a Girl'
187(10)
10 Agency Narratives and Notions
197(22)
Structure -- Agency in the Educational Context
197(1)
Systemic Given Agency Freedoms
198(3)
Educated by Someone
201(6)
Own Reasoning
207(3)
Yes but No Ambivalence
210(2)
No Reason to Choose Differently?
212(7)
PART IV Conclusion
219(16)
11 Concluding Remarks and Reflections
221(14)
Reflecting Women's Stories
221(3)
Methodological Reflections
224(4)
`Now my Picture is Beside my Mother's'
228(7)
Appendix A1 235(2)
Appendix A2 237(3)
Appendix A3 240(1)
Appendix A4 241(6)
Appendix A5 247(1)
Appendix A6 248(1)
Index 249
Mari-Anne Okkolin is Postdoctoral Fellow at the Centre for Research on Higher Education and Development, University of the Free State, South Africa, and Researcher at the Department of Education, University of Jyväskylä, Finland.