TY - JOUR
T1 - Educating 'surplus population'
T2 - uses and abuses of aspiration in the rural peripheries of a globalising world
AU - Ansell, Nicola
AU - Froerer, Peggy
AU - Huijsmans, Roy
AU - Dungey, Claire
AU - Dost, Arshima
AU - Piti, null
PY - 2020/12/4
Y1 - 2020/12/4
N2 - Increasing school enrolment has been a focus of investment, even in remote rural areas whose populations are surplus to the requirements of the global economy. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted in primary schools and their neighbouring communities in rural areas of Lesotho, India and Laos, we explore how young people, their parents and teachers experience schooling in places where the prospects of incorporation into professional employment (or any well rewarded economic activity) are slim. We show how schooling uses aspiration, holding out a promise of a 'better future' remote from the lives of rural children. However, children’s attachment to such promises is tenuous, boosted yet troubled by the small minority who defy the odds and succeed. We question why education systems continue to promote occupational aspirations that are unattainable by most, and why donors and governments invest so heavily in increasing human capital that cannot be absorbed.
AB - Increasing school enrolment has been a focus of investment, even in remote rural areas whose populations are surplus to the requirements of the global economy. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted in primary schools and their neighbouring communities in rural areas of Lesotho, India and Laos, we explore how young people, their parents and teachers experience schooling in places where the prospects of incorporation into professional employment (or any well rewarded economic activity) are slim. We show how schooling uses aspiration, holding out a promise of a 'better future' remote from the lives of rural children. However, children’s attachment to such promises is tenuous, boosted yet troubled by the small minority who defy the odds and succeed. We question why education systems continue to promote occupational aspirations that are unattainable by most, and why donors and governments invest so heavily in increasing human capital that cannot be absorbed.
KW - schooling
KW - aspiration
KW - surplus population
KW - Lesotho
KW - India
KW - Laos
U2 - 10.11143/fennia.90756
DO - 10.11143/fennia.90756
M3 - Article
JO - Fennia - International Journal of Geography
JF - Fennia - International Journal of Geography
ER -