Black Development in South Africa

Black Development in South Africa
Author: Bureau for Economic Research re Bantu Development (South Africa)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 234
Release: 1976
Genre: Homelands (South Africa)
ISBN:

Monograph on the economic development of the African population in the bantustans of South Africa R - gives a historical outline of migration in and a description of the black populations of southern africa, discusses labour market and employment problems, development programmes, educational policy, trends in economic development and public expenditure, etc., and compares the bantustans to other developing countries in Africa. Graphs, illustrations, maps, references and statistical tables.

The History of Bantu Education: 1948 - 1994

The History of Bantu Education: 1948 - 1994
Author: Ivan Raymond Wills
Publisher:
Total Pages: 450
Release: 2011
Genre: Afrikaners
ISBN:

"This thesis is a critical analysis of the history of Bantu education under apartheid. Bantu Education was implemented by the South African apartheid government as part of its general policy of separation and stratification of the races in society. This research, using historical-comparative methodology, examines the role of ideology in education and the state, the shifts in ideology and representations of schooling - designed to train and fit Africans for their role in the evolving apartheid society. In this thesis it is argued that Bantu Education was a segregated system of schooling for low-skilled occupation and domestication. This research examines the nexus between African Education and the social production process during this period. References will be made to the evolution of African education from 1948 to 1994, in order to give a clear background of Native Education, under apartheid. The thesis analyses the way the Bantu Education policy directly affected the school curriculum, and access to schooling, in order to reinforce racial inequalities and social stratification. The Apartheid regime advocated that native education should be based on the principle of trusteeship, non-equality, and segregation. The aim of the Bantu Education policy was to inculcate the white man's view of life, especially that of the Boer nation (Afrikaners), which was the senior trustee. This research project demonstrates that the outcomes of Bantu Education hampered South Africa's cultural, economic and scientific progress." (Abstract)