Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

State, Business and Education: PublicPrivate Partnerships Revisited [Kõva köide]

Businesses, philanthropies and non-profit entities are increasingly successful in capturing public funds to support private provision of schooling in developed and developing countries. Coupled with market-based reforms that include weak regulation, control over workforces, standardization of processes and economies of scale, private provision of schooling is often seen to be convenient for both public authorities and businesses. This book examines how the public subsidization of these forms of private education affects quality, equality and the realization of human rights.

With original research from leading experts, The State, Business and Education sheds light on the privatization of education in fragile circumstances. It illustrates the ways in which private actors have expanded their involvement in education as a business, and shows the influence of policy borrowing on the spread of for-profit education. Case studies from Argentina, Bangladesh, Brazil, China, India and Syrian refugee camps illustrate the ways in which private actors have expanded their involvement in education as a business.

This book will be of interest not only to academics and students of international and comparative education, but also to education development professionals in both the private and public sectors, with its empirical assessment of case studies, and careful consideration of the lessons to be learned from each.

Contributors include: M. Avelar, J. Barkan, M. de Koning, A. Draxler, C. Fontdevila, S. Kamat, F. Menashy, M.C. Moschetti, E. Richardson, B. Schulte, C.A. Spreen, G. Steiner-Khamsi, A. Verger, Z. Zakharia, A. Zancajo
List of contributors
vii
Series preface x
1 Introduction
1(15)
Gita Steiner-Khamsi
Alexandra Draxler
2 Experimenting with educational development: international actors and the promotion of private schooling in vulnerable contexts
16(23)
Antoni Verger
Adrian Zancajo
Clara Fontdevila
3 Advocacy as core business: new philanthropy strategies in Brazilian education policy-making
39(13)
Marina Avelar
4 Private participation in the education of Syrian refugees: understanding the roles of businesses and foundations
52(16)
Zeena Zakharia
Francine Menashy
5 Allies and competitors: private schools and the state in China
68(17)
Barbara Schulte
6 Unfair competition: exploring state-funded low-fee private schools' logics of action in Buenos Aires
85(21)
Mauro C. Moschetti
7 From billionaires to the bottom billion: who's making education policy for the poor in emerging economies?
106(25)
Carole Anne Spreen
Sangeeta Kamat
8 From low-cost to low-fee: BRAC's transition to a for-profit private school model in Bangladesh
131(17)
Emily Richardson
9 Death by a thousand cuts: privatizing public education in the USA
148(21)
Joanne Barkan
10 Public-private partnerships in education assessed through the lens of human rights
169(20)
Mireille de Koning
Index 189
Edited by Gita Steiner-Khamsi, William Heard Kilpatrick Professor of Comparative Education, Teachers College, Columbia University, US; Honorary UNESCO Chair in Comparative Education Policy and Alexandra Draxler, Senior Advisor, NORRAG