ABSTRACT

African social development is often explained from outsider perspectives that are mainly European and Euro-American, leaving African indigenous discourses and ways of knowing and doing absent from discussions and debates on knowledge and development. This book is intended to present Africanist indigenous voices in current debates on economic, educational, political and social development in Africa. The authors and contributors to the volume present bold and timely ideas and scholarship for defining Africa through its challenges, possible policy formations, planning and implementation at the local, regional, and national levels. The book also reveals insightful examinations of the hype, the myths and the realities of many topics of concern with respect to dominant development discourses, and challenges the misconceptions and misrepresentations of indigenous perspectives on knowledge productions and overall social well-being or lack thereof. The volume brings together researchers who are concerned with comparative education, international development, and African development, research and practice in particular. Policy makers, institutional planners, education specialists, governmental and non-governmental managers and the wider public should all benefit from the contents and analyses of this book. 

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Indigenous Discourses on Knowledge and Development in Africa

part |48 pages

Indigenous Knowledge and Development

part |91 pages

Indigenous Knowledge, Culture and Education

chapter |16 pages

Counter-Visioning Contemporary African Education

Indigenous Science as a Tool for African Development

chapter |14 pages

Reclaiming the Education for All Agenda in Africa

Prospects for Inclusive Policy Spaces

chapter |15 pages

Learning by Doing

Julius Nyerere's Education Policy for Self-Reliance in Tanzania

chapter |14 pages

A Diploma for a Debt

Students' Perception of Their Student Loan Program in Burkina Faso