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The application of liberation pedagogy : have members of rural development committees in southern Ethiopia become critically aware of their poverty after participating in consciousness-raising education?Gilman, Lori-Ann January 2003 (has links)
Liberation and critical theories of education believe in the political nature of all types of education. 'The school' in the third world is 'oppressive' because it creates and perpetuates 'western-style' class hierarchies. As such, nothing good will be secured at the marginalized groups without a drastic shift in their socioeconomic and political condition. Consciousness-raising non-formal adult education is 'liberation education' aimed specifically for the disenfranchised rural poor. It helps them develop skills to discover the oppressive elements in their lives, become aware of the causes of their destitution, and empower them to take action to transform their realities. Previous studies have demonstrated such programs have been successful in emancipating the poor; this evaluative study of liberation education in southern Ethiopia has also proven to help the target population develop a critical consciousness regarding their impoverished and oppressed conditions and help empower them to work towards changing their lives.
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The application of liberation pedagogy : have members of rural development committees in southern Ethiopia become critically aware of their poverty after participating in consciousness-raising education?Gilman, Lori-Ann January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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The role of aspirations and identities in decisions to invest in children's schoolingOrkin, Kate January 2015 (has links)
I demonstrate that household investments in children's education in Ethiopia are affected by parents' self-beliefs (such as their locus of control), parents' aspirations for children's educational attainment, children's conceptions of their roles and identities in the household and at school, and children's own preferences, all concepts not widely studied in development economics. Two empirical chapters report on a field experiment in which randomly selected adults watched documentaries about role models who were poor but succeeded in agriculture or small business. Six months later, parents' self-beliefs and aspirations for children's education were higher in the treatment than in the placebo and control groups. Enrolment of children in school, spending on education, saving and use of credit also increased. A third empirical chapter draws on longitudinal qualitative research to argue that children's preferences for their time allocation between work and school are strongly influenced by the desire to comply with valued identities as students and as independent earners and contributors to the household. The fourth chapter suggests that understanding children's preferences might improve predictions about their reaction to education policies. The literature predicts an increase in time in school will not improve test scores: children will reduce effort because they desire a limited amount of learning. I find a reform to lengthen the Ethiopian primary school day improves test scores. Although this could occur through many mechanisms, one possibility is that children do not prefer to limit their desired amount of learning. This suggests that better evidence on children's preferences might improve prediction of the effects of policies to alter school inputs. The conclusion reflects on whether the empirical relevance of concepts of self-beliefs, aspirations and identities implies that assumptions in standard models of decision-making in economics about the characteristics of beliefs and preferences ought to be rejected. I argue that these ideas can be captured by existing economic concepts of beliefs and preferences and by standard assumptions about these concepts. I suggest that, contrary to recent accounts building on human capital theory, self-beliefs should be viewed as beliefs, not non-cognitive skills. I consider aspirations as a type of preference, shaped by both objective constraints and self-beliefs. I consider identity as a preference for complying with a social role, but highlight that such preferences are often altruistic, rather than self-interested. In conclusion, I argue that economics should draw further on other social sciences, including psychology, to develop substantive theories of the formation and characteristics of beliefs and preferences. Doing so will suggest when it is appropriate to apply standard models and how their assumptions can be modified if their predictions do not hold.
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The impact of state policies and strategies in Ethiopia's development challengesTessema, Amha Dagnew 03 1900 (has links)
No abstract / Development Studies / M.A. (Development Studies)
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Assessing environmental sanitation in Urban setting of Duken Town, EthiopiaMohammed, Abdulwahid Idris 11 1900 (has links)
The aim of this study was to assess the environmental sanitation conditions with regard to water, sanitation, waste management and personal hygiene of households of Dukem town in Ethiopia. A cross-sectional study design was used to conduct the research. A total of 391 households had participated in the study. Majority of households had access to improved source of drinking water. The mean per capita per day water consumption of the households was low. Two-thirds of households had improved toilet facilities. Availability of improved waste management was grossly inadequate. Two-thirds of households had washed hands after visiting toilet. Generally households had good domestic environmental sanitation conditions but it also emerged that the households were deprived from full range of access to the most essential environmental sanitation services. Therefore, the inadequate level of service to the study area could be seen as opportunity for further focused improvements towards universal access to improved environmental sanitation. / Health Studies / M.A. (Public Health)
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Assessing environmental sanitation in Urban setting of Duken Town, EthiopiaMohammed, Abdulwahid Idris 11 1900 (has links)
The aim of this study was to assess the environmental sanitation conditions with regard to water, sanitation, waste management and personal hygiene of households of Dukem town in Ethiopia. A cross-sectional study design was used to conduct the research. A total of 391 households had participated in the study. Majority of households had access to improved source of drinking water. The mean per capita per day water consumption of the households was low. Two-thirds of households had improved toilet facilities. Availability of improved waste management was grossly inadequate. Two-thirds of households had washed hands after visiting toilet. Generally households had good domestic environmental sanitation conditions but it also emerged that the households were deprived from full range of access to the most essential environmental sanitation services. Therefore, the inadequate level of service to the study area could be seen as opportunity for further focused improvements towards universal access to improved environmental sanitation. / Health Studies / M.A. (Public Health)
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Land tenure reform and socioeconomic structures in Dabra Marqos (Gojjam), Ethiopia : c1901-1974Daniel Dejene Checkol 02 1900 (has links)
In this doctoral thesis I advance a new interpretation of the social and economic history of
Ethiopia beginning with the turn of the twentieth century and ending with the third decade of
that century. One of my achievements in this study is the careful utilization of property
documents in the reconstruction of the modern social history of Ethiopia, more precisely
Däbrä Marqos (Gojjam) in northwestern Ethiopia. Besides original use of property
documents in my study, I have used new and less conventional genre of sources, viz.,
courtroom observation, images, biblical references, private documents, and old sayings.
Combining these genre of sources and oral data helped me to provide a plausible story and
advance a new interpretation of the property system and the socioeconomic and power
relations arising from modern Däbrä Marqos (Gojjam). I emphasize the continued relevance
of tax appropriation in contemporary Däbrä Marqos (Gojjam). This is to counter an adverse
claim to tribute in kind and services as well as the resilience of old practices relating to land
use, political power, exploitation, social domination, landholding and violence. All these
served as the background to impede changes, in the course of progress of the imperial policy,
mostly, between liberation in 1941 and revolution in 1974. As the main argument embedded
in my study is that despite the attempt of the imperial state to figure out what the content of
land tenure and surplus appropriation in Däbrä Marqos (Gojjam) was like, in actual fact
what the effort produced was the people's multiple reaction. New measures relating to
property reform which the imperial state tried to codify and fix failed to achieve stability and
order, precipitated a revolution leading to the end of the imperial rule with broadly similar
historical trajectory to what many scholars viewed on the subject. / History / D. Phil. (History)
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The impact of state policies and strategies in Ethiopia's development challengeTessema, Amha Dagnew 03 1900 (has links)
No abstract available / Development Studies / M.A. (Development Studies)
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Gender desparity in healthcare leadership in Southern EthiopiaYimmam, Getachew Lenko 11 1900 (has links)
Gender disparity in healthcare sector leadership positions is a major problem among
female healthcare professionals in Southern Ethiopia. This study explored gender
disparities among healthcare professionals in healthcare sector leadership positions.
The findings would be used to develop
guidelines to reduce gender disparities in
healthcare leadership in healthcare sectors to a minimum in Ethiopia. This study used
exploratory and descriptive cross-sectional research design incorporating a mixed
methods research approach to collect both quantitative and qualitative data
simultaneously which were analyzed during the same phase of the research process.
The quantitative survey data was collected using piloted structured questionnaire while
qualitative data was collected using semi-structured interview guide containing open
questions. Quantitative data was collected from a random sample of 414 healthcare
professionals and qualitative data from a purposive sample of 21 healthcare professionals
from seven districts having the experiences of gender disparity in healthcare leadership
positions. Quantitative data had a compliance rate of 98% and it was entered into EpiData
version 3.1 and exported to SPSS (version 24) for further analysis, and the qualitative
data was coded and analyzed manually into thematic content.
Quantitative findings of the study revealed that only 26% (n=108) of the participants
reported that representation of women in healthcare sector leadership positions in the
past few years has been increased. The majority of leadership positions assumed by
study participants were at department head level while only 1.3 % were on chief excutive
officers and 2.3% medical director positions respectively. Of these none was a female
and 67%, n=264 of the participants do not have leadership role in a health service facility.
Study participants having bachelor degree level of education were 2.3 times more likely
to be represented in healthcare sector leadership positions than those participants having
master’s degree and diploma [AOR=2.3, (95% CI: 1.289, 4.252)].
Challenges experienced by women health professionals regarding gender disparity in
leadership positions in health service facility included family responsibilities, lack of
support, lack of self-esteem or self-confidence, lack of career advancement, and cultural
bias. The conclusions derived from the study was that women need all the opportunities,
encouragement and support to allow them access to and success in healthcare sector
leadership positions through informal and formal leadership training. / Health Studies / D. Litt et Phil (Health Studies)
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Poverty alleviation through community development : the case of PRO PRIDE-EthiopiaAtfaye, Haile 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA)--Stellenbosch University, 2001. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Misunderstanding of poverty and lack of sound poverty alleviating strategy, among
others, are problems of some of the few NGOs existing in Ethiopia. There is a
problem of understanding their roles in relation to the State and other stakeholders.
The principles they apply in their intervention are other problems. These are the issues
that were researched in the PRO PRIDE case study.
The legitimacy of PRO PRIDE as a poverty-alleviating programme in view of global
and Ethiopian poverty and the consequent policy focuses is justified.
The principles of PRO PRIDE - community participation, gender equity, intersectoral
collaboration, appropriate technology, focus on prevention, participatory
management, cost effectiveness and sustainability of programmes - are sound
principles. Reviewing the practices of PRO PRIDE as guided by the aforementioned
principles it is understood that the community development principles - human
orientation, public participation, empowerment, ownership, release, social learning,
adaptiveness and simplicity - are commendably achieved.
PRO PRIDE well dealt with understanding poverty and its interwoven nature. Issues
such as the deprivation trap that the poor are entangled in; the general explanation of
poverty that are given by different authors; vicious cycles of poverty and social,
economic and political causes of poverty which are operating at local, national and
international levels; and the rural-urban dynamics that work in exacerbating the urban
poverty are covered in its socio-economic study. The study of the programme areas
shows that they depict a dismal picture as a result of the operation of these poverty
dynamics.
Regarding the integrated rural-urban poverty alleviation strategy, the State has made
favourable policies and itself dwelled on rural poverty due to lack of financial
capacity to cover both rural and urban areas. The State's rural focus is accepted to
impact on the urban poverty through changing the migration pattern. PRO PRIDE is
operating in the urban setting to connect the nexus - the rural-urban strategy. PRO
PRIDE is operating with an integrated urban development strategy encompassing
income generation, basic education, primary health care, HIV IAIDS prevention and
control and environmental sanitation. Through integrating these areas of intervention
PRO PRIDE is improving the quality of life, promoting sustainable urban economic growth, creating income and employment generating opportunities, giving people
access to resources and opportunities, improving the distribution of income and
welfare, and applying sound developmental principles.
The functioning of PRO PRIDE is proven to be in a well compliance with the
requirement for organisations alike. It is functioning in collaboration and participation
with the popular sector - the people themselves and their community leaders. It
operates with the agreement of the State bodies such as FRDCB and with other line
bureaus such as Health, Education, Environmental Development, and Labour and
Social Affairs. It collaborates with donors the major being ActionAid - Ethiopia
(AAE). Internal components of PRO PRIDE such as the Board and the staff as well as
its organisational development influence its operation. All the programmes and the
projects are managed through PRO PRIDE's interaction with its internal and external
stakeho lders.
PRO PRIDE as an agent of development has played as a catalyst to initiate
development, focused on empowerment and using the people's latent potential,
materialised capacity building and facilitation. These are basically the requirements
that the current NGOs should fulfill, which PRO PRIDE commendably did.
The study has indicated that although PRO PRIDE is an organisation of overall
success, there are some areas of future focus both by the State and PRO PRIDE.
Recommendations are made as to what both parties should do in their future focuses. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Wanopvattings oor armoede en die gebrek aan gesonde strategieë vir die verligting
van armoede, onder andere, is swakhede van sommige van die paar bestaande NGO's
in Ethiopië. Verder ondervind hulle ook probleme om hulle rol met betrekking tot die
Staat en ander deelhouers te verstaan; ook die beginsels wat hulle by intervensie
beoefen, is problematies. Hierdie is die kwessies wat deur die PRO PRIDE
gevallestudie ondersoek word.
Die legitimiteit van PRO PRIDE as 'n armoede-verligtende program, gesien in die lig
van die globale en Ethiopiese armoede en die voortspruitende beleidsfokusse, word
geregverdig.
Die beginsels van PRO PRIDE - gemeenskapsdeelname, geslagsgelykheid,
intersektorale samewerking, geskikte tegnologie, fokus op voorkoming, deelnemende
bestuur, koste-effektiwiteit en die volhoubaarheid van programme - is gesonde
beginsels. Oorweging van die praktyke van PRO PRIDE aan die hand van
voorgenoemde beginsels toon dat die beginsels van gemeenskapsontwikkeling -
menslike oriëntasie, openbare deelname, bemagtiging, eienaarskap, bevryding, sosiale
leer, aanpasbaarheid en eenvoudigheid - noemenswaardig verwesenlik is.
PRO PRIDE het goed daarin geslaag om armoede en die verweefde aard daarvan te
verstaan. Kwessies soos die ontberingsvalstrik waarin die armes vasgevang is; die
algemene verklarings vir armoede deur verskillende skrywers; die bose kringloop van
armoede en die sosiale, ekonomiese en politieke oorsake van armoede, aangetref op
plaaslike, nasionale en internasionale vlakke; asook die landelik-stedelike dinamika
wat meewerk tot die verergering van stedelike armoede word gedek in die sosio-ekonomiese
studie. Die bestudering van die programareas verbeeld 'n droewige
prentjie te wyte aan die operering van hierdie armoede- dinamiek.
Betreffende die geïntegreerde landelik-stedelike armoede-verligtingstrategie, het die
Staat gunstige beleide gemaak en oorheersend gefokus op landelike armoede vanweë
'n gebrek aan finansiële kapasiteit vir die aanspreking van die probleem in beide
landelike en stedelike gebiede. Die Staat se landelike fokus is aanneemlik gevind vir
die impak wat dit op stedelike armoede kon hê deur verandering van die migrasiepatroon.
PRO PRIDE opereer vanuit 'n stedelike omgewing om die verbinding, landelik-stedelike strategie, te bewerkstellig. Dit opereer binne 'n geïntegreerde
stedelike ontwikkelingstrategie behelsende inkomstegenerering, basiese opvoeding,
primêre gesondheidsorg, VIGS-voorkoming en -beheer, asook omgewingsanitasie.
Deur integrering van hierdie tussenkomsgebiede verbeter PRO PRIDE
lewenskwaliteit, bevorder dit volhoubare stedelike ekonomiese groei, genereer dit
inkomste- en indiensnemingsgeleenthede, maak dit hulpbronne en geleenthede
toeganklik vir mense, verbeter dit die distribusie van inkomste en welvaart en pas dit
gesonde ontwikkelingsbeginsels toe.
Die funksionering van PRO PRIDE is bewys te voldoen aan die vereistes gestel vir
ooreenstemmende organisasies. Dit funksioneer met die samewerking en deelname
van die volksektor - die mense en hulle gemeenskapsleiers. Dit opereer met die
instemming van Staatsorgane soos FRDCB en ander lynstaatsinstansies soos dié van
Gesondheid, Opvoeding, Omgewingsontwikkeling en Arbeid en Sosiale
Aangeleenthede. PRO PRIDE werk ook saam met donateurs van wie die vernaamste
ActionAid-Ethiopië (AAE) is. Interne komponente soos die Raad en personeel, asook
die organisatoriese ontwikkeling van PRO PRIDE beïnvloed die operering daarvan.
Alle programme en projekte word bestuur deur PRO PRIDE se interaksie met sy
interne en eksterne deelhouers. PRO PRIDE as 'n ontwikkelingsagent het as 'n
katalisator opgetree om ontwikkeling te inisieer, het gefokus op bemagtiging en
gebruik van die mense se latente potensiaal en het kapasiteitsbou en fasilitering
bewerkstellig. Hierdie basiese vereistes waaraan NGO's behoort te voldoen is
noemenswaardig deur PRO PRIDE gerealiseer.
Die studie het getoon dat hoewel PRO PRIDE in die geheel geslaag het as
organisasie, daar tog sommige gebiede is wat toekomstige aandag van beide die Staat
en PRO PRIDE verdien. Aanbevelings word gemaak oor wat beide partye in hul
toekomstige fokus behoort te onderneem.
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