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dc.contributor.authorSAYED, Fatma El-zahraa Hassan
dc.date.accessioned2006-10-13T14:53:23Z
dc.date.available2006-10-13T14:53:23Z
dc.date.issued2006
dc.identifier.citationCairo ; New York : The American University in Cairo Press, 2006en
dc.identifier.isbn9789774160165
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/6272
dc.description.abstractBasic education-considered essential for building democratic societies and competitive economies-has headed the agendas of development agencies in recent years. During the same period, Egypt topped the lists of recipients of development assistance and proclaimed education to be its national project. In Transforming Education in Egypt, political scientist Fatma Sayed explains how Egyptian domestic political actors have interacted with and reacted to international development aid to Egypt's educational system, particularly when that aid is linked to sensitive issues of reform and cultural change. In recent years, international donors have called for changes that are inconsistent with the functions, structures and culture of Egyptian institutions, resulting in a climate of suspicion surrounding foreign aid to education. In this penetrating analysis, Sayed looks at how problems are diagnosed and reforms implemented and resisted. As Sayed demonstrates, the low level of ownership and consensus among the various domestic actors and the failure to establish strategic coalitions to support the reforms result in poor implementation and incomplete internalization. Policy makers have to date not succeeded in achieving the minimum level of domestic consensus essential for embedding the values and culture that bring about true reform. From the debate over free education to conspiracy theories and the evolving definition of international norms, this book sheds new light on the conflict of ideas that surrounds donor-sponsored reforms.
dc.description.tableofcontents-- Part 1: International Norms and Domestic Policy Development -- Chapter 1: Development Assistance and the International Socialization of Basic Education Reforms in the 1990's -- Chapter 2: External and Internal Security Pressures and their Implications for Decision-Making in Basic Education -- Part 2: Development Assistance Versus Domestic Opposition: The Conflict of Ideas -- Chapter 3: The Philosophy of Development and Its Impact on Development Assistance Directed to Basic Education -- Chapter 4: Conditionality, the Conspiracy Theory, and International Cooperation -- Chapter 5: Development Assistance and the Concept of Participation in Basic Education -- Chapter 6: Conclusion
dc.language.isoenen
dc.relation.isversionofhttp://hdl.handle.net/1814/5377
dc.titleTransforming education in Egypt : Western influence and domestic policy reformen
dc.typeBooken
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