Articles:
Integration by Education: A Study of Cameroon’s Bakola-Bagyeli
Sarah Tucker
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- Title:
- Integration by Education: A Study of Cameroon’s Bakola-Bagyeli
- Author(s):
- Tucker, Sarah
- Date:
- 2011
- Type:
- Articles
- Department:
- Helvidius Group
- Volume:
- 21
- Permanent URL:
- http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:11373
- Book/Journal Title:
- Journal of Politics & Society
- Abstract:
- The process of Bakola-Bagyeli integration into the public school system of Kribi, Cameroon entails a delicate balance between modernization, preserving tradition, and protecting human rights. In the case of the Bakola-Bagyeli, education has the potential to foster empowerment, but also to erode culture. Increased integration into the education system decreases time spent learning traditional knowledge and skills, increases sedentarization, and creates a need for money to buy necessities such as books and school uniforms. Seeking money obliges Bakola-Bagyeli families to join the market economy through working and shopping, further detracting from their culture of self-sufficiency. The alternative to education is a continuing rural subsistence of their life in the forest, isolated from—and thus left vulnerable to—the processes that impact the forest and their way of life. The lack of Bakola-Bagyeli presence in the broader community in and around Kribi has meant that their voice has been largely missing from decision-making processes, despite the efforts of organizations and individuals to speak on their behalf. I focused my research on the challenges faced by the Bakola-Bagyeli, the potential of education as a tool to address these challenges, and the utility of education as perceived by the Bakola-Bagyeli themselves, school officials, and members of Kribi civil society.
- Subject(s):
-
Education
African studies
- Item views:
- 188