Abstract

This article examines the Indian government's projected public–private partnership (PPP) efforts in educational in its Eleventh and Eleven Five Year Plans. The research seeks to establish the state's role as a financier, manager, and administrator of instruction using the recommended PPP approaches. The findings show that PPPs in schools are directly linked to privatized, or that, despite assertions of a "vastly increased role that the nation," the recommended techniques limit the state's participation in education financing, administration, and governance. In compare to most African and Latin American countries' experiences, there has been little focus in the broader policy debate on the role that reinvigorated marketing of a domestic manufacturing capacity in either an import tariffs atmosphere out over five decades that followed liberation may well have rarely played in nurturing specific prerequisites that enabled globalization but instead nationalization policy positions to 'take' as much favorably.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call