2010
DOI: 10.1007/s10671-010-9088-z
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School decentralisation in Nepal: a disjuncture between macro-level advocacy and micro-level reality?

Abstract: While school decentralisation policy in Nepal has been taking effect for more than 8 years with the financial and technical assistance of the World Bank, confusion and controversy have been prevalent in relation to its goals, outcomes and sustainability. This article explores the issues of school decentralisation in Nepal by relating the Bank's broader advocacy of decentralisation to the perceived reality at the national and local level. It does so by first summarising the Bank's approach to decentralisation a… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Nepal made certain policy amendments in 2001 and 2002 embracing decentralisation and community participation, and devolved school management authority, including the authority to hire teachers, to school committees (Carney et al 2007;Carney and Bista 2009;Khanal 2010aKhanal , 2010b. These amendments did not entirely replace the central mechanism for teacher appointment, promotion and transfer, however.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nepal made certain policy amendments in 2001 and 2002 embracing decentralisation and community participation, and devolved school management authority, including the authority to hire teachers, to school committees (Carney et al 2007;Carney and Bista 2009;Khanal 2010aKhanal , 2010b. These amendments did not entirely replace the central mechanism for teacher appointment, promotion and transfer, however.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As I discussed above, schooling in Nepal had begun as an external project backed up by external ideology of modernization and development. This explains why schooling in Nepal always remained an exclusionary and centralized function controlled and run by people who are accountable to the government bureaucrats and not to the people of the community (Onta, 2000;Caddell, 2005;Shields & Rappleye, 2008;Khanal, 2010). Schooling in Nepal was actually developed and implemented as a project designed to legitimize a particular culture of few -traditional and new elites that includes politicians, bureaucrats, businesspeople, and the civic leaders and to maintain their control.…”
Section: Nepali Practices Of Linking Education and Rural Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Going back to 2002, when the government introduced the Community School Support Project (CSSP), a pilot project of school decentralization, with the total financial and technical support of the World Bank, it amended the education policies in line with the broader policy guidelines of the Bank and other donors (see Khanal, 2010a). The VEC is among the various policy concepts brought about by these amendments.…”
Section: Participation In Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As many other developing nations, Nepal embarked on a policy reform in school education embracing decentralization and local ownership particularly after the establishment of democracy in 1990 (see Khanal, 2010a;Carney, Bista, & Agergaard, 2007). This article looks at how the policy creates spaces for community participation in school and to what extent a gap exists between policy intention and policy implementation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%