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ETHNIC FAVOURITISM (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   176491


Ethnic favouritism in Kenyan education reconsidered: when a picture is worth more than a thousand regressions / Simson, Rebecca ; Green, Elliott   Journal Article
Green, Elliott Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Does a leader's ethnicity affect the regional distribution of basic services such as education in Africa? Several influential studies have argued in the affirmative, by using educational attainment levels to show that children who share the ethnicity of the president during their school-aged years have higher attainment than their peers. In this paper we revisit this empirical evidence and show that it rests on problematic assumptions. Some models commonly used to test for favouritism do not take adequate account of educational convergence and once this is properly accounted for the results are found to be unstable. Using Kenya as a test case, we argue that there is no conclusive evidence of ethnic favouritism in primary or secondary education, but rather a process of educational convergence among the country's larger ethnic groups. This evidence matters, as it shapes how we understand the ethnic calculus of politicians.
Key Words Ethnicity  Education  Kenya  Patronage  Distributive Politics  Ethnic Favouritism 
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2
ID:   191846


Role of secondary school teachers in shaping a political culture of ethnicity and ethnic favouritism: the case of Kenya / Langer, Arnim; Kuppens, Line   Journal Article
Langer, Arnim Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Since Kenya's independence in 1963, ethnicity has been an important factor in Kenyan politics and everyday life. While recent research has shown that ethnic favouritism impacted the allocation of educational resources in the past, so far, no systematic research has been conducted on how teachers exacerbate, mitigate or countervail the political culture of ethnicity and ethnic favouritism. As agents of socialisation, teachers’ attitudes and behaviour can, consciously or unconsciously, convey the message that ethnic favouritism is normal and socially acceptable, or conversely delegitimise such practices. Based on a list experiment among 894 secondary school teachers in the county of Nairobi, we find that at least 25% of teachers have already favoured coethnic pupils. Interviews indicate that such favours are seldom blatant in nature and mainly serve to show solidarity with one's kin. Still, even small – frequently well-intentioned – favours may damage inter-group attitudes, trust and relations, and may even contribute to the persistence of ethnic politics.
Key Words Ethnicity  Education  Kenya  Teachers  Ethnic Favouritism  List-Experiment 
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