Education policies, the developmental state and GNH in Bhutan : perspectives from government and schools /

Published by : Studera Press, (New Delhi : ) Physical details: xx, 227 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. ISBN:9788194725282. Year: 2021 Item type: Books
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

This collection of papers is the result of a three-years research project collaboration between Bhutanese and Danish scholars on ‘Health in Education in Bhutan’. The project involved extensive fieldwork and oral and written interviews with numerous Principals and teachers in Schools and Medical staff in Health facilities around the country. The results showed quite clearly that there is an urgent need for more research and it is our modest hope that this edited collection may contribute to further studies and improvement of the already impressive results the public sector, parents and children have achieved in terms of high enrollment and a lively debate regarding the role of the school in society and how education will nurture the future and ongoing societal changes in the country.

One of the big questions confronting scholars who study Bhutan’s development trajectory is how and why the priorities devoted to development policies evolved in a certain direction and more specifically what determined, structurally speaking and over less than three decades, the gradual transformation of a feudal and rural society into a relatively well functioning developing democracy and constitutional monarchy. Development aid is probably one of the most decisive factors explaining the “miracle”. Another determining factor has been the latent conflict between cultural preservation and sovereignty and on the other hand the impact from rapid modernization. This has created a sense of national urgency and made the rise of an efficient, rational and capable bureaucracy with a developmental ethos possible.

As one commentator from the UNDP notes: Self-confidence and assertiveness are predominant characteristics of the interaction between Bhutanese policy-makers and their foreign counterparts. Bhutanese are firmly in the driver’s seat of development, while foreign experts are strictly considered advisors with no influence on decision-making. Similarly, it is not uncommon that development aid is rejected because of attached “strings” set by donor agencies. Development in Bhutan is distinctly Bhutanese. Furthermore, the public sector has been the major engine of economic growth and shifting governments have tried to promote more private sector but so far with little success.

These issues are covered through the lens of health and education policies. The book consists of a range of case-studies and in-depth research on various aspects related to government policy, the role of teachers and principals and pedagogics related to Gross National Happiness and the overall role of the state.

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