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Showing 1 to 15 of 36 results Save | Export
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Caputo-Levine, Deirdre; Lynn, Vanessa – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2022
This article uses analysis of 72 syllabi to investigate portrayals of Black urban communities in undergraduate Urban and Community Sociology courses taught in colleges and universities in the United States. The authors conducted keyword analyses of the syllabi and content analyses of the assigned readings. Although professors' course descriptions…
Descriptors: Blacks, Urban Areas, Urban Environment, Undergraduate Study
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Wentworth, Annette – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2021
Black women in South Africa (SA) face multiple and interlocking systems of oppression every-day; among them gender-based violence, economic marginalization, and the legacy of racialized and gendered subjugation under centuries of colonization, followed by the apartheid regime. On the heels of South Africa's transition to democracy in 1994, the…
Descriptors: Females, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Pandemics, Foreign Countries
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Glaser, Clive – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2021
The Bantu Education system, which replaced missionary-run black schooling in the mid-1950s, expanded schooling to accommodate the basic economic needs of the South African economy but it was done as cheaply as possible. The state paid teachers' salaries and in return it expected obedience and conformity from its employees. It was a tight-fisted,…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Teacher Salaries
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Mthembu, Ntokozo – Open Journal for Educational Research, 2019
The post-apartheid era in South Africa was intended to be a period in which to redress past injustices in almost all social spheres, including education, particularly in terms of curriculum transformation to include African-centered knowledge systems. However, research reveals the limitations posed by compensatory education, particularly when it…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Racial Segregation, Afrocentrism, African Culture
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Marneweck, Aja – Research in Drama Education, 2020
The article explores the multifaceted process of creating the large-scale annual public puppetry event, The Barrydale Giant Puppet Parade, in the rural town of Barrydale, South Africa. It unpacks the complex layers of meaning and making arising through a co-creative puppetry project in a region of South Africa marked by poverty and the on-going…
Descriptors: Poverty, Puppetry, Self Concept, Cultural Activities
Tyson, Pearline – ProQuest LLC, 2018
This research is a study of the educational systems of South Africa and the United States in a comparative perspective. The research examines the success and failures of the two systems, taking black student dropout rates as a case study for understanding the structural, philosophical and public policy foundations of the genesis and development of…
Descriptors: Blacks, African American Students, Dropout Rate, Social Change
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Biraimah, Karen L. – International Review of Education, 2016
Namibia has one of the most dehumanising and destructive colonial pasts of any nation in Africa, or, for that matter, the world. Before colonisation, the area now known as Namibia was home to diverse cultural groups. The successive colonial regimes of Germany and South Africa inflicted genocide, brutality and apartheid on the region. Namibia…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Culturally Relevant Education, Role, African Culture
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Wittmann, Veronika – Multicultural Education & Technology Journal, 2012
Purpose: The aim of this paper is to provide analysis and insight which addresses the over-determined discrimination of so-called coloured and black South African women, not just on the basis of gender but racial hierarchies still prevalent as well in the rainbow nation. Design/methodology/approach: The observations grapple with reconciling the…
Descriptors: Females, Gender Discrimination, Racial Segregation, Race
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le Roux, Adré – South African Journal of Education, 2014
Despite fundamental reforms to South African education, large performance gaps still prevail between former black schools and former white schools. Nineteen years into a democracy and education in post-apartheid South Africa still retains a strong racial dimension between poorer communities and more affluent communities. Differential access to…
Descriptors: Social Change, Racial Segregation, Blacks, Whites
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Swartz, Sharlene; Harding, James Hamilton; De Lannoy, Ariane – Comparative Education, 2012
Drawing on empirical data from two recent research studies in post-Apartheid South Africa, this paper asks what it means to be poor, young and black, and belong in a society that has suffered debilitating and dehumanising racial subjugation, actively excluding people from citizenship, and how poverty serves to perpetuate this exclusion. It…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Racial Segregation, Economically Disadvantaged, Foreign Countries
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Swartz, Sharlene – Journal of Moral Education, 2010
Research and pedagogy in the field of morality and moral education has long been dominated by philosophical and psychological disciplines. Although sociological studies and theorising in the field have not been absent, it has been limited and non-systematic. Drawing on a study that investigated the lived morality of a group of young South Africans…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Poverty, Racial Segregation, Ethnography
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Fataar, Aslam – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2009
This paper is an analysis of the work of three principals in an impoverished black township in post-apartheid South Africa. Based on qualitative approaches, it discusses the principals' entry into the township, and their navigation of their schools' surrounding social dynamics. It combines the lenses of "space" and…
Descriptors: Racial Segregation, Foreign Countries, Principals, Social Change
Eynon, Diane E. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
This dissertation is structured as a critical policy analysis employing historical methods. It examines how the post apartheid government's economic growth and development polices have informed the higher education system and how this has changed women's financial, occupational, political, social, and educational prospects in South Africa. Through…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Higher Education, Poverty, Rape
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Christopher, A. J. – Urban Studies, 2001
Analysis of 1996 South African census data reveals a general decline in urban racial segregation since ending legal apartheid in 1991. Whites remain both more segregated and less open to change than other groups. Africans have become more integrated, though most are constrained in their choice of residential options due to poverty. Segregation…
Descriptors: Apartheid, Blacks, Poverty, Racial Segregation
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Ndegwa, David; Horner, Dudley; Esau, Faldie – Social Indicators Research, 2007
In the mid-1950s, the City of Cape Town was part of a wider area demarcated as a Coloured Labour Preference Area. The free movement of African people into the city was strictly controlled and the residential areas were segregated along racial lines. In terms of Apartheid's grand design, an area designated Mitchell's Plain was demarcated for…
Descriptors: African Americans, Poverty, Racial Segregation, Democracy
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