Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Graduate Thesis |
Title | The Making of Democrats in Sub-Saharan Africa: Education and Political Culture in Malawi and Ghana |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2017 |
URL | https://openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/bitstream/handle/1887/47663/The Making of Democrats in Sub-SaharanAfrica (MA Thesis) A.Dineva.pdf?sequence=1 |
Abstract | “Education is widely seen as the means for constructing citizens” (Kamens, 1988: 117). Both scholars and practitioners agree on this very purpose of education. The idea that education is a tool for turning people into citizens is not new (ibid.). The idea that education is a tool for turning citizens into democrats, however, is quite recent. Democrats, as defined in this paper, are citizens who not only belong to a certain state but who actively participate in its political life. The notion that education can construct not just citizens but democrats firstly emerged in the 1990s and ever since countless number of governments, non-governmental organizations as well as scholars have endorsed the expansion of Universal Primary Education (UPE) programs throughout developing countries. The main reason behind it is the assumption that well-educated people always become democrats, hence participating citizens. This precisely is the working hypothesis of this paper: Citizens who are more educated and better informed are more actively engaged in the political life of their country. The following paper is to problematize this very hypothesis and the reasons behind it by studying two cases in Sub-Saharan Africa and tracing that process of transformation of political culture. The main research question thus that will be addressed is: How does universal primary education in Sub-Saharan Africa transform the political culture of its citizens? In chapter 1, I will draw a conceptual framework of the research. In so doing, I will define the concepts of education, democracy (or democrats) and political culture and will elaborate on the specific elements of these concepts that I will focus on during the analysis. In chapter 2, I will review primary and secondary literature on the relationship between education and political culture aiming to: 1) establish what policies have been endorsed by international organizations, 2) what assumptions and ideas these policies were based on, and 3) what is still missing from the existing literature, particularly in the context of Sub-Saharan Africa. Namely, this chapter will present the arguments behind the assumption that education plays a major role in reshaping people’s political attitudes, while raising the question how that translates into reshaping their political practices too. |