2008
DOI: 10.3126/jer.v1i0.7949
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Schooling: The Way People See It

Abstract: In this paper, I discuss how people perceive and give meaning to schooling or education. Based largely on field-data, I organize this discussion on four key themes social status and employment, everyday skills and knowledge, gender and caste, and social relationships. While making these discussions I argue that powerful contradicting forces are operating in educational arena, one, local pressures from below for educational opportunities and improvement and the other, from above, resistance to maintain hierarch… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Ghephel's fear that he could die in the conflict prevented him from even thinking about joining the Maoists, though he did contemplate the option of education it afforded (Ghephel, age sixteen, Lower Mustang). 63 Ghephel's story reveals both the educational opportunities offered by the Maoists, and how education becomes, as Pajuil states, "a site where agency and structure are in constant interplay producing contestations and conflicts," 64 but also how the Maoists were able to use rural schools as a space for recruitment without the use of violence. Education was seen by the Maoists as a key ingredient in liberating youth in the rural Himalayan villages from the autocratic rule 65 and deprivation that preceded their arrival.…”
Section: Education or Separation? Youth Narrate Their Migration To An...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ghephel's fear that he could die in the conflict prevented him from even thinking about joining the Maoists, though he did contemplate the option of education it afforded (Ghephel, age sixteen, Lower Mustang). 63 Ghephel's story reveals both the educational opportunities offered by the Maoists, and how education becomes, as Pajuil states, "a site where agency and structure are in constant interplay producing contestations and conflicts," 64 but also how the Maoists were able to use rural schools as a space for recruitment without the use of violence. Education was seen by the Maoists as a key ingredient in liberating youth in the rural Himalayan villages from the autocratic rule 65 and deprivation that preceded their arrival.…”
Section: Education or Separation? Youth Narrate Their Migration To An...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Academically, where the migrants move from; where they move to; why such movement occurs; how migrants pave the way forward; and what the effects of migration are in both origin and recipient communities, are the research agendas. Pertinently, migration occurs, while individuals or households always 'want to make their life prosperous liberating from the hardship life of the home community' (Parajuli, 2008). Usually, migrant's intention is to make life comfortable in the new community.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%