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Panel 142: Education, Knowledge and Mobility in Africa

Panel organisers: Nathalie Bonini (Univ. of Tours, France), Mélanie Jacquemin (INED, France) and Marc Pilon (Univ. Paris Descartes, France)

Contact: nathalie.bonini@univ-tours.fr

The Association of Research on Education and Knowledge (Association de Recherche sur l’Education et les Savoirs – ARES) propose to organize a panel on the theme of “Education, knowledge and mobility in Africa”. Here, “mobility” refers to its geographical meaning (residential mobility, migration, relocation…), and “Africa” refers to its larger extent (including Maghreb and Mashrek).

Firstly, the panel would be to focus, from a shared thematic field, on issues which have usually been dealt with separately (school mobility, student mobility, child fosterage, nomadism, circulation of knowledge…). Secondly, our aim is to give visibility to the research studies on education and knowledge in Africa, as no previous panel has covered this specific issue in the former ECAS. We argue that education (and knowledge) is a crucial issue to understand the current changes on the continent. This meeting would also encourage an exchange of ideas and partnership between researchers who work on close or related thematic fields in the area of education and knowledge from the perspective of mobility. We suggest three possible themes to explore the links between education, knowledge and mobility in Africa: a first line would explore how education/knowledge triggers mobility. Secondly we would question how mobility impacts on education and on the construction, the ownership or the monopoly of knowledge. Thirdly we would deal with the specific case of student mobility.

Accepted Abstracts

SESSION 1

Migration and Schooling during Childhood in Sub-Saharan Africa: Contributions and Limits of Quantitative Approaches

Historicity of Universities in the Determination of Student Mobility: A Reading from West African Countries

The Development of Secondary School in Tanzania and Mobility of the Maasai

Education, Gender, and Mobility in Urban Ethiopia

'Ignorance is Like Drought'. Education Dynamics among Afar Pastoralists in Ethiopia

SESSION 2

No Longer Able to Be Dependent: Understanding Migration Among Accra's Street Children

Youth in Rural Migration towards Fez – Impact upon Academic and Socioprofessionnal Paths

“You Don’t Pay Fees if There Are Relations and You Work Well.” Rural Boys’ Dependence on Migrant Networks to Train for Off-farm Work in Burkina Faso

Getting Knowledge to Become an Adult: The Social Value of Education through School and Mobility in a Bambara Context (South-West Mali)

Urban Students on the Way to Educate Farmers: Some Impacts of the Ethiopian National Literacy Campaign (1975-1991)

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