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This paper examines the higher education sector in Sub-Saharan African countries. It begins by describing the growth and structure of the sector, the amount of resources used the original rational for its development. This is followed by analyses of the labor markets faced by higher education graduates using a wide range of data including rates of return, wage structures and trends, recorded vacancies, levels of expatriate employment and government employment policies. From these, labor...
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_JB^.he foreign debt of African nations has increased so rapidly in recent years that threats of bankruptcy hover across the continent, raising the prospect that Africa's most serious crisis will be triggered not by drought, but by debt. The debt problem is not only slowing economic growth and increasing poverty; it is fomenting political upheaval by forcing these nations to neglect social and economic development in order to make debt payments. People in many countries are denied the most...
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Examination of rainfall records for the Upper Inland Niger Delta show that rainfall from 1971 through present has been 20% below the long term average. Rainfall since 1982 has been only 60% of normal. Analysis of drought damage and changes in soils and vegetation due to prevailing dry conditions shows that over 75% of the lakes, ponds, and swamps mapped as permanent water bodies in the 1950's and which carried water through the dry season as late as 1976 are now ephemeral. Most lakes visited...
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This article is intended to discuss and clarify certain issues raised by Dr Carr-Hill in his article: ‘Education Planning for Scientific Socialism in Mozambique: a View from the Left’ (published in the International Journal of Educational Development, Vol. 2, No. 3, 1982). It is argued that Dr Carr-Hill has misinterpreted some aspects of educational policy and planning to Mozambique, and has confused some practical education difficulties with the overall aims of Frelimo policy.
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A shortage of adequately trained agricultural extension workers has been one of the limiting factors in establishing a viable agricultural extension service in the southern region of Sudan. In an effort to more effectively train their extension personnel, the Regional Ministry of Agriculture, with US AID support, established the Southern Manpower Development Project. The authors describe one segment of that project—the revitalization of the Rumbek Agricultural Training Centre (RATC). This...