Workers’ Education in the Global South


Book Description

Workers’ Education in the Global South explores the historical development of radical workers’ education in South Africa as one particular strand within the broader tradition of radical adult education. Drawing on the theoretical resources of Activity Theory, Gramsci, Freire and others, it investigates the key features of workers’ education as a form of pedagogy with a unique history and logic of practice, and explores how it has been shaped by its location within labour and other social movements as well as its ‘southern’ location within the global political economy. Successive chapters explore its counter-hegemonic but contested purposes, its knowledge practices that seek to overcome the historical divide between intellectual and manual labour, and a pedagogy which often assumes didactic forms but which retains a democratic character through its embeddedness in working class experience. It illustrates the rich processes of experiential learning that happen through day-to-day organising, in workers’ cultural activity as well as through mass action. It argues that this tradition of workers’ education currently stands at a crossroads, as global neoliberal market policies and post-apartheid education and training policies threaten to undermine its radical social vision, and concludes by offering ideas on how this tradition of radical workers’ education might be renewed.




Renewing Workers' Education


Book Description

"Renewing workers' education focuses on educational methods created by workers for workers. It extends beyond trade unions to include a range of educational initiatives aimed at the working class including working class women, casual and informal sector workers, migrant workers, and workers' political parties. This book fills a gap in the South African literature on workers' education and documents the recent history as well as current practices and perspectives, including some international experiences. It explores conceptual tools that may assist in reflecting on and theorising the practice of workers' education and analyses current challenges. This captivating book also seeks to inform future policy and practices on workers' education and is key for those who wish to reinvigorate and contribute to building an alternative future for workers' education." --Back cover.










Democracy and Education


Book Description

. Renewal of Life by Transmission. The most notable distinction between living and inanimate things is that the former maintain themselves by renewal. A stone when struck resists. If its resistance is greater than the force of the blow struck, it remains outwardly unchanged. Otherwise, it is shattered into smaller bits. Never does the stone attempt to react in such a way that it may maintain itself against the blow, much less so as to render the blow a contributing factor to its own continued action. While the living thing may easily be crushed by superior force, it none the less tries to turn the energies which act upon it into means of its own further existence. If it cannot do so, it does not just split into smaller pieces (at least in the higher forms of life), but loses its identity as a living thing. As long as it endures, it struggles to use surrounding energies in its own behalf. It uses light, air, moisture, and the material of soil. To say that it uses them is to say that it turns them into means of its own conservation. As long as it is growing, the energy it expends in thus turning the environment to account is more than compensated for by the return it gets: it grows. Understanding the word "control" in this sense, it may be said that a living being is one that subjugates and controls for its own continued activity the energies that would otherwise use it up. Life is a self-renewing process through action upon the environment.







Reconstructing Education


Book Description

After the unification of Germany had first been greeted with euphoria on both sides of the Wall, it did not take long for disillusion to set in when it became obvious that structures, mentality, values and outlook were very different in the Old and New Bundesländer. Moreover, whereas during the initial phase the East Germans were hoping just for a reform of their existing systems, they were soon disappointed and had to accept the fact that a fusion was out of the question; instead, East German structures were expected to assimilate to those of West Germany which led to the accusation of the latter's "colonization" of East Germany. The restructuring of the education system played a crucial role in the transformation of East Germany; consequently, enormous sums were pumped into East German schools and the training of teachers. This is the first study in any language that closely examines the process re-education and addresses such vital questions as whether the reforms were educationally sound, to what degree they meshed with local circumstances, what measures were taken to fill the vacuum in moral and social values that was left by the discrediting of Marxism-Leninism, and what happened to the notion of "equality", the key principle of a socialist society. Contrasting the old and the new regime in the East, the author addresses these and many more critical issues. Numerous case studies and substantial interview material richly illustrate the author's arguments.




Building the New World


Book Description

Topics addressed include masters and journeymen, skilled women workers, carpenters, the skilled men of the metal trades in the Hillside workshops, the construction of a political culture based on class and the shifting meanings of that word.







中華民國112年版衛生福利年報 英文版


Book Description

Preface Organization and Policy –Chapter 1 Organizational Structure –Chapter 2 Expenditure –Chapter 3 Administrative Goals Health and Welfare Indicators –Chapter 1 Population Indicators –Chapter 2 Vital Indicators –Chapter 3 National Health Expenditure –Chapter 4 Social Welfare Indicators –Chapter 5 International Comparisons An Environment Conducive to Health –Chapter 1 Healthy Childbirth and Growth –Chapter 2 Unhealthy Habits –Chapter 3 Active Aging and Prevention of Noncommunicable Diseases –Chapter 4 Health Communication and Health Surveillance Health Care –Chapter 1 Healthcare Systems –Chapter 2 Mental Health and Psychiatric Care –Chapter 3 Medical and Public Health Manpower –Chapter 4 Health Care Quality –Chapter 5 Health Care in Remote Areas –Chapter 6 Health Care for Specially Targeted Groups Long-Term Care Services –Chapter 1 Long-Term Care Regulations and Systems –Chapter 2 The Long-Term Care Resource Development –Chapter 3 Long-Term Care Human Resources –Chapter 4 Long-Term Care Services Quality Communicable Disease Control –Chapter 1 Communicable Disease Control Regulations and System –Chapter 2 Prevention and Control of Major/Emerging Communicable Diseases –Chapter 3 Communicable Disease Preparedness and Response, and Infection Control –Chapter 4 Immunization Management of Food and Drug –Chapter 1 Management of Food –Chapter 2 Management of Medicinal Products –Chapter 3 Management of Medical Devices and Cosmetics –Chapter 4 National Laboratories and Risk Management –Chapter 5 Food and Drug Information, Communication, and Dissemination National Health Insurance and National Pension –Chapter 1 National Health Insurance –Chapter 2 National Pension System Social Welfare –Chapter 1 Children and Youth Welfare –Chapter 2 Welfare for Women and Family Support –Chapter 3 Welfare for the Elderly –Chapter 4 Welfare for Persons with Disabilities –Chapter 5 Strengthening the Social Safety Net Social Assistance and Social Work –Chapter 1 Social Assistance –Chapter 2 Social Work –Chapter 3 Community and Links to Other Resources Gender-Based Violence Prevention and Protective Services –Chapter 1 Prevention of Gender-Based Violence –Chapter 2 Prevention of Domestic Violence –Chapter 3 Prevention of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment –Chapter 4 Protection of Children, Adolescents, the Elderly, and Individuals with Disabilities Research, Development, and International Cooperation –Chapter 1 Technological Studies on Health and Welfare –Chapter 2 International Cooperation Appendices –Appendix 1 Health and Welfare Indicators –Appendix 2 Notifiable Diseases Statistics –Appendix 3 Technical Term Keys