The Effect of Colonial and Pre-Colonial Institutions on Contemporary Education in Africa

Working Paper 850

Authors

  • Leone Walters University of Pretoria Author
  • Carolyn Chisadza University of Pretoria Author
  • Matthew Clance University of Pretoria Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.71587/sw6mk242

Keywords:

Ethnic institutions, Education, Africa

Abstract

This paper argues that contrary to previous findings, present-day education outcomes in Africa cannot be independently attributed to colonial or pre-colonial ethnic institutions. We propose that it is instead the complementarity or contention between colonial and pre-colonial institutions that result in education outcomes we observe today. Using geolocated DHS literacy outcomes for Cameroon, Cˆote d’Ivoire, Ghana, and Nigeria, our findings suggest that the positive effect of British rule on contemporary literacy is diminished in centralised ethnic regions. This paper contributes to debates on colonial and pre-colonial ethnic influences on African development, moving beyond country-level analysis.

Published

2024-09-20

Issue

Section

Working Paper Series

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