Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6841196 | International Journal of Educational Development | 2016 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
This article seeks to illustrate how various actors involved in a state-NGO partnership to provide marginalized girls educational opportunities appropriate discourses related to schooling and empowerment in India. It traces the multiple discourses of empowerment underlying the implementation of the Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyala (KGBV) program in the Western state of Gujarat to gain a more nuanced understanding of the influences on educational programs' ability to support social transformation. I show how these multiple, and often competing, discourses might be appropriated to take into account the systems, structures, and practices that act as barriers to implement reform-oriented practices that perpetuate girls' marginalization. To do so, I also posit that programs and partnerships must specifically and systematically address the cultural and institutional forces that work to reinforce inequality and marginalization, but that these perspectives need large scale popular and political buy-in in order to realize their dual goals of service provision and long-term social transformation.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Social Sciences
Development
Authors
Payal P. Shah,