Equitable Access and Inclusiveness in Basic Education: Roadblocks to Sustainable Development Goals
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Journal of Public Administration
Abstract
For more than half a century, the recognition of education by the international community as a social
transformative tool and a fundamental human right has found strong affirmations in conventions,
statutes and resolutions. The inception of the Sustainable Development Goals (2015–2030), as a sequel
to the Millennium Development Goals (2000–2015) for instance acknowledges education as an indispensable
conduit for people to realize their capabilities whiles completing primary school cycle.
However, while the international community is yet to realise the potential of education as a catalyst
for development, greater inequalities in access to education in the face of heightening social, economic,
political and cultural challenges exist for different social classes in different parts of developing countries,
precisely Ghana. The paper sought to investigate the challenges to basic education access and inclusiveness
in Ghana. The study was conducted in two (2) selected districts each in some six(6)purposefully
sampled regions against the backdrop of the 2015 Ghana PovertyMapping Report. Relying on field
gathered data, the study data analysis revealed that access to education in the study areas are chiefly
poverty induced. It also found out that, the lack of a sustainable education policy and political will,
coupled with incessant political interferences in education by governments over the years has been
deleterious to education access in Ghana. The study concluded that merit-based poverty considerations,
and the introduction of social policy interventions is crucial to increasing access to education. It is
therefore pertinent for Government, Non-Governmental Organisations and Civil Society Organisations,
Corporate bodies and other stakeholders alike to reignite their commitment to ensuring the extensive
extension of assistance to the needy, whiles pushing for the implementation of pro-poor policies aimed
at increasing access and equity/inclusiveness relative to basic education in Ghana.
Description
Research Article
Citation
Vincent Ekow Arkorful, Ibrahim Basiru, Reindolf Anokye, Amadu Latif, Eric Kojo Agyei, Anastasia Hammond, Sarah Pokuaah, Emmanuel Vincent Arkorful & Shamsudeen Abdul-Rahaman (2019): Equitable Access and Inclusiveness in Basic Education: Roadblocks to Sustainable Development Goals, International Journal of Public Administration, DOI: 10.1080/01900692.2019.1627554