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YSI-EHES Economic History Graduate Webinar: Pablo Fernández Cebrián
Online Seminars with EHES
Start time:
May 27, 2021 @ 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm
EDT
Location:
Online
Type:
Other
Description
Pablo Fernández Cebrián, doctoral candidate from the University of Barcelona will present his paper: Withdrawal of the state: the provision of primary schooling in Mozambique under indigenato.
Registration form to attend the webinar: here.
Abstract
After World War II, there was a generalised move among colonial states in Africa towards greater intervention in the provision of schooling. In Mozambique, on the other hand, the state kept its role in the provision of higher quality primary schooling for the white population, but it abandoned the direct running of rudimentary primary schools targeted at the black population. The agreements signed between the Portuguese Estado Novo and the Catholic Church in the early 1940s made this the preserve of Catholic missions, which rose exponentially in number and importance. As part of this shift, state-run schools were gradually transferred to Catholic missions. I explore the reasons for the Portuguese strategy, and find support for two mutually non-exclusive hypotheses. Firstly, I combine expenditure and enrolment data to construct measures of government expenditure per child enrolled in state-run schools and in Catholic mission schools prior to the shift. I find that transferring schooling responsibilities to Catholic missions may have been a cheaper option for the colonial state to expand rudimentary schooling than running schools itself. Secondly, I construct a geo-referenced dataset of the expansion of Catholic missions in Mozambique between 1922-1942, to show that the goal of transferring state-run schools to Catholic missions may have been not only to save resources but also to limit the influence of Protestant missions over the African population. In analysing the withdrawal of the state in Mozambique, I shed light on the political economy of schooling provision in colonial Africa through the case of a comparatively weak colonial power.
Hosted by Working Group(s):
Attendees
Maylis Avaro