Globalization
and The Rise of Mass Education explores how global forces shaped
national and regional educational trends. The globalization of the world
economy, starting in the 19th century, brought about important
changes that affected school policy and long-term human capital accumulation.
Large migrations prompted brain drain and gain across countries, alongside
rapid transformations in the sectoral composition of the economy and demand for
skills. Ideas on education and schooling circulated more easily, bringing about
relevant changes in public policy, while the changing political voice of
winners and losers from globalization determined the path followed by public
choice. Similarly, religion and the spread of missions came to play a crucial
role for the rise of schooling globally. The book is the first of its kind to
link globalization and education in a historical perspective, and includes
contributions focused o n Europe, the Americas, Africa and Asia.
Gabriele Cappelli, one of the editors of the book (with David
Mitch), presenting the volume.
The edited volume was presented at the University of Goettingen on
December 3rd, 2019, in an event organized by Bruno Witzel de Souza,
one of the authors, and sponsored by the Centre for Global Migration
Studies and the Courant
Centre for Poverty, Equity and Growth in Developing Countries. Gabriele Cappelli, one of the editors,
presented the concept of the book, its research agenda and its main results,
while Felix
Meier zu Selhausen, Irina España Eljaiek
and Bruno Witzel de Souza presented their chapters – addressing, respectively, missions,
conversion and education in colonial Africa, racial
exclusion and school development in Colombia during the First Globalization,
and the
impact of German schools amid Brazilian coffee plantations (1840 – 1940).
The chapter presented by Felix Meier zu Selhausen.
The audience, coming from different backgrounds (mainly historians
of education, economic historians and development economists), was engaged and
active in asking questions and providing comments that expand the range of
issues addressed by the book. One issue that was discussed is to what extent
the history of education is constrained by country-focused analyses and the
availability of nationally-produced data, and to which degree we can write a
more transnational history of education within the framework of global history
and the history of knowledge.
Some issues, like the impact of German-migrant enclaves and German
schools in Brazil, raised the interest of development economists, who drew
parallels with the current integration of refugees across European countries.
The comments, questions and debates that were prompted by the event suggest
that the book will be of interest for many scholars interested in the issue of
globalization and its educational impact, no matter their backgrounds.
Three of the four authors at the end of the event. Form left to
right: Bruno Witzel de Souza, Irina España Eljaiek and Gabriele Cappelli. We
thank Felix Meier zu Selhausen for all the pictures --- the reason why he does
not show up in them.