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International Education Aid in Developing Asia

Policies and Practices

  • Book
  • © 2015

Overview

  • First book to provide readers insights into how international education aid and development can move forward after MDGs and EFA end in 2015

  • Focuses on aid and development effectiveness beyond 2015 are explained and mapped from an Asian perspective

  • Base its policy arguments on abundant evidence drawn from case studies of Asian countries, including donor states, states with a dual and transitional role and recipient states

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Table of contents (13 chapters)

  1. Debates Over International Education Aid Policies and Practices in Developing Asia

  2. Lessons Learnt from Asian Donors’ Engagement in Education MDGs and EFA

  3. Lessons Learnt from Asian Recipient Countries’ Reflections on education MDGs and EFA on the Ground

  4. What Next for Post-2015 International Education Aid Agenda?

Keywords

About this book

This book provides an Asian perspective on the timely, urgent questions of how international education aid and development should move forward and what development roles Asia should play, especially following the end of the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and Education for All (EFA) in 2015. To answer these questions, four separate but interwoven parts, which analyze and anchor education MDGs and EFA policies and practices by means of diverse case studies of donor states, recipient states, and states with a dual and transitional role in Asia, are addressed. On the basis of the analyses, a clearer and concrete direction for effectively and sustainably extending international education aid and development beyond 2015 can be derived.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Department of International and Comparative Education, National Chi Nan University, Puli, Nantou, Taiwan

    I-Hsuan Cheng

  • Graduate Institute of Education, National Chung Cheng University, Min-Hsiung, Chiayi, Taiwan

    Sheng-Ju Chan

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