Due to the historically outsized influence of the United Kingdom’s development assistance office on international aid, a better understanding of the underlying ideologies and political priorities guiding this agency would help the larger aid community more clearly understand the power dynamics and structural context of the development industry. However, these ideologies and dynamics are often left implicit and are not always easily understood. The purpose of this article is to use critical discourse analysis to unpack the ideologies, political priorities and power dynamics present in DfID’s official education policy documents. In so doing, we make the implicit explicit, and begin to unpack the implicit meanings and assumptions that are pres...
Historically the UK’s foreign aid and national security interests have long tended to go hand in han...
Nation-state governments implement educational policies for improving their national systems and, ul...
Despite claims that colleges and universities are isolated from ideological preferences, sociopoliti...
This paper discusses the recent history of education aid policy. It highlights an important shift in...
AbstractThis paper discusses the recent history of education aid policy, and introduces the studies ...
Foreign aid is an integral aspect of international cooperation. The complexity and controversy of fo...
In June 2020, the United Kingdom (UK) government announced the merger of the Department for Interna...
The ultimate financial responsibility for improving educational access, participation, and quality l...
AbstractEducation began to be included as a component of foreign assistance in the early 1960s as it...
© 2020, The Author(s). This article explains the value of discourse analysis for interpreting the co...
August 2010, an internal Department for International Development (DFID) paper was leaked that point...
The adaptation of the Millennium Development Goals and Education for All targets in 2000 highlighted...
The ultimate financial responsibility for improving educational access, participation, and quality l...
Despite the rhetoric about the importance of international aid to education, resulting gains from ai...
Development aid is characterised by an inherently asymmetry between donor and recipient institution....
Historically the UK’s foreign aid and national security interests have long tended to go hand in han...
Nation-state governments implement educational policies for improving their national systems and, ul...
Despite claims that colleges and universities are isolated from ideological preferences, sociopoliti...
This paper discusses the recent history of education aid policy. It highlights an important shift in...
AbstractThis paper discusses the recent history of education aid policy, and introduces the studies ...
Foreign aid is an integral aspect of international cooperation. The complexity and controversy of fo...
In June 2020, the United Kingdom (UK) government announced the merger of the Department for Interna...
The ultimate financial responsibility for improving educational access, participation, and quality l...
AbstractEducation began to be included as a component of foreign assistance in the early 1960s as it...
© 2020, The Author(s). This article explains the value of discourse analysis for interpreting the co...
August 2010, an internal Department for International Development (DFID) paper was leaked that point...
The adaptation of the Millennium Development Goals and Education for All targets in 2000 highlighted...
The ultimate financial responsibility for improving educational access, participation, and quality l...
Despite the rhetoric about the importance of international aid to education, resulting gains from ai...
Development aid is characterised by an inherently asymmetry between donor and recipient institution....
Historically the UK’s foreign aid and national security interests have long tended to go hand in han...
Nation-state governments implement educational policies for improving their national systems and, ul...
Despite claims that colleges and universities are isolated from ideological preferences, sociopoliti...