Education and Empowered Citizenship in Mali

Primary school enrollment has nearly tripled in Mali since 1991, when the country made its first transition to multiparty democracy. Jaimie Bleck explores the effect of this expanded access to education by analyzing the relationship between parents’ and students’ respective experiences with schooling and their current participation in politics.

In a nation characterized both by the declining quality of public education and by a growing number of accredited private providers, does education contribute substantially to the political knowledge and participation of its citizens? Are all educational institutions (public and private, Islamic and secular) equally capable of shaping democratic citizens?

Education and Empowered Citizenship in Mali is informed by Bleck’s original survey of one thousand citizens, which she conducted in Mali before the 2012 coup d’état, along with exit polls and interviews with parents, students, and educators. Her results demonstrate conclusively that education of any type plays an important role in empowering citizens as democratic agents. Simply put, students know more about politics than peers who have not attended school. Education also appears to bolster participation of parents. Bleck finds that parents who send their children to public school are more likely to engage in electoral politics than other Malian citizens. Furthermore, Bleck demonstrates that increasing levels of education are associated with increases in more engaged forms of political participation, including campaigning, willingness to run for office, and contacting government officials.

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Education and Empowered Citizenship in Mali

Primary school enrollment has nearly tripled in Mali since 1991, when the country made its first transition to multiparty democracy. Jaimie Bleck explores the effect of this expanded access to education by analyzing the relationship between parents’ and students’ respective experiences with schooling and their current participation in politics.

In a nation characterized both by the declining quality of public education and by a growing number of accredited private providers, does education contribute substantially to the political knowledge and participation of its citizens? Are all educational institutions (public and private, Islamic and secular) equally capable of shaping democratic citizens?

Education and Empowered Citizenship in Mali is informed by Bleck’s original survey of one thousand citizens, which she conducted in Mali before the 2012 coup d’état, along with exit polls and interviews with parents, students, and educators. Her results demonstrate conclusively that education of any type plays an important role in empowering citizens as democratic agents. Simply put, students know more about politics than peers who have not attended school. Education also appears to bolster participation of parents. Bleck finds that parents who send their children to public school are more likely to engage in electoral politics than other Malian citizens. Furthermore, Bleck demonstrates that increasing levels of education are associated with increases in more engaged forms of political participation, including campaigning, willingness to run for office, and contacting government officials.

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Education and Empowered Citizenship in Mali

Education and Empowered Citizenship in Mali

by EDMOND SMOOT III
Education and Empowered Citizenship in Mali

Education and Empowered Citizenship in Mali

by EDMOND SMOOT III

eBook

$39.95 

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Overview

Primary school enrollment has nearly tripled in Mali since 1991, when the country made its first transition to multiparty democracy. Jaimie Bleck explores the effect of this expanded access to education by analyzing the relationship between parents’ and students’ respective experiences with schooling and their current participation in politics.

In a nation characterized both by the declining quality of public education and by a growing number of accredited private providers, does education contribute substantially to the political knowledge and participation of its citizens? Are all educational institutions (public and private, Islamic and secular) equally capable of shaping democratic citizens?

Education and Empowered Citizenship in Mali is informed by Bleck’s original survey of one thousand citizens, which she conducted in Mali before the 2012 coup d’état, along with exit polls and interviews with parents, students, and educators. Her results demonstrate conclusively that education of any type plays an important role in empowering citizens as democratic agents. Simply put, students know more about politics than peers who have not attended school. Education also appears to bolster participation of parents. Bleck finds that parents who send their children to public school are more likely to engage in electoral politics than other Malian citizens. Furthermore, Bleck demonstrates that increasing levels of education are associated with increases in more engaged forms of political participation, including campaigning, willingness to run for office, and contacting government officials.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781421417820
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 10/01/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 232
File size: 5 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jaimie Bleck is the Ford Family Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame.

Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. Research Design and Methodological Approach
3. Politikini Fanga Malila / Power and Politics in Mali
4. Mali's Evolving Educational Landscape
5. Can Education Empower Citizens?
6. Schooling and Parents' Engagement with the State
7. Educational Expansion and Democratization in Africa
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

A theoretically important, methodologically rigorous, and original contribution to our understanding of education and democracy in Africa. Bleck's insights are grounded in a deep knowledge of and engagement with politics in Mali, but are also keenly relevant for many other parts of Africa and the developing world.
—Lauren M. MacLean, Indiana University, author of Informal Institutions and Citizenship in Rural Africa: Risk and Reciprocity in Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire

Using original data from Mali, Bleck documents how state education can create empowered citizens and that broadening political participation is intimately tied to the state’s ability to provide public education. This book will be essential reading for students of democracy, education and development in Africa and beyond.
—Susanna D. Wing, Haverford College, author of Constructing Democracy in Africa: Constitutionalism and Deliberation in Mali

Jaimie Bleck presents a thought-provoking study of the political implications of expanded education in Africa's democratizing countries. Drawing on an impressive combination of field research and survey data, Bleck shows that increased schooling not only helps to produce citizens with greater political knowledge, but also induces citizens to engage more actively with their state. These important findings are likely to inform the next generation of research on political behavior not only in African countries where the future of democracy remains in doubt, but also in Muslim-majority countries where public institutions must increasingly compete with Islamic and private alternatives in service provision.
—Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California, Berkeley, author of Multiethnic Coalitions in Africa: Business Financing of Opposition Campaigns

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