Hunter-Gatherer Children at School: A View From the Global South
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35032Dato
2024-06-14Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Ninkova, Velina; Hays, Jennifer Lynn; Lavi, Noa; Ali, Aishah; Lopes da Silva Macedo, Silvia; Davis, Helen Elizabeth; Lew-Levy, SheinaSammendrag
Universal formal education is a major global development goal. Yet hunter-gatherer communities have extremely low participation rates in formal schooling, even in comparison with other marginalized groups. Here, we review the existing literature to identify common challenges faced by hunter-gatherer children in formal education systems in the Global South. We find that hunter-gatherer children are often granted extensive personal autonomy, which is at odds with the hierarchical culture of school. Hunter-gatherer children face economic, infrastructural, social, cultural, and structural barriers that negatively affect their school participation. While schools have been identified as a risk to the transmission of hunter-gatherer values, languages, and traditional knowledge, they are also viewed by hunter-gatherer communities as a source of economic and cultural empowerment. These observations highlight the need for hunter-gatherer communities to decide for themselves the purpose school serves, and whether children should be compelled to attend.
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SageSitering
Ninkova, Hays, Lavi, Ali, Lopes da Silva Macedo, Davis, Lew-Levy. Hunter-Gatherer Children at School: A View From the Global South. Review of Educational Research. 2024Metadata
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