Abstract
When it comes to education for mobile pastoralists, Mongolia is an exceptional case. Until fifty years ago, herders com-prised the majority of the Mongolian population. Although a satellite of the Soviet Union, the Mongolian People’s Re-public was a state in which mobile pastoralism was not challenged, and herders were not constructed as social out-casts. Equally exceptional was the country’s modernisation, witnessed in its decided alignment with equal opportunities. In Mongolia, it was not ‘nomadism’ that was associated with backwardness, but illiteracy. Policy-makers aimed to combine spatial with social mobility by building schools further and further out in the grasslands, employing locals as teachers, and fostering interplay between modern formal education and extensive animal husbandry. Yet after 1990, when development discourse pigeon-holed post-socialist Mongolia as a Third World country, the so-called shock therapy led to severe cuts in education. Herders were essentialised as ‘nomads’, which caused donor-driven policies of educational planning to construe pastoralists as challenges. Ironically, during the initial decade of Education for All, the younger generation had—for the first time in Mongolia’s history—less educational opportunities than their parents. This article discusses narratives of inclusion and the political consequences of ascribed social identities.
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Stolpe, I. (2016). Social versus spatial mobility? Mongolia’s pastoralists in the educational development discourse. Social Inclusion, 4(1), 19–31. https://doi.org/10.17645/si.v4i1.379
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