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International conference examines female access to education in Africa

By Simeon Moss

A two-day international conference at Cornell, beginning today, examines what many see as a major stumbling block to the success of future African development -- gender inequality and women's lack of access to higher education.

CEPARRED (the Pan African Studies and Research Center in International Relations and Education for Development), based in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, is sponsoring the conference in collaboration with Cornell's Poverty, Inequality and Development Initiative (PIDI). "Women and Higher Education in Africa: Engendering Human Capital and Upgrading the Human Right to Schooling" takes place today, March 28, and Friday, March 29, on campus. The conference, which is free and open to the public, precedes another Cornell conference on a related subject, the international AIDS pandemic (read the story).

"Given the centrality of African women in the entire society as leading productive forces in the economy, their access to all levels of education, including higher education, will significantly determine the speed at which Africa will embark on a sustained development process based on its major assets, in spite of, or maybe because of, the constraints of the global system," said N'Dri Assié-Lumumba, associate professor in Africana studies and in education at Cornell and a co-founder and deputy director of CEPARRED, in charge of its gender issues unit.

During the conference, major papers on gender inequalities, especially involving women in higher education, will be presented and discussed, say conference organizers, as will be the theoretical aspects of inequality and practical policy dimensions.

Conference participants will include a mix of noted scholars, policy-makers and social activists, including: university administrators; representatives from several major Pan African educational and scientific institutions, as well as officials from similar institutions in other countries; officers from United Nations' programs committed to social justice and the development of education; and several faculty members from Cornell, Wells College, Ithaca College and Syracuse University.

The conference will convene today at Cornell's Africana Studies and Research Center, with a general introduction and reception, during which Aklilu Habte, professor and former president of the University of Addis Ababa, will address the topic "Gender, Capacity Development and Higher Education in Africa: Reflections on the Past and Future."

On Friday the conference will move to 401 Warren Hall, where an opening session at 8:45 a.m. will introduce Tukumbi Lumumba-Kasongo, director and co-founder of CEPARRED, visiting scholar in Cornell's Department of City and Regional Planning and the Herbert J. Charles and Florence Charles Faegre Professor of Political Science at Wells College; Ravi Kanbur, the Lee Teng-hui Professor of World Affairs and professor of economics at Cornell and director of PIDI; Paul N'Da, professor at the Université de Cocody Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, representing that country's minister of higher education and scientific research; Assié-Lumumba; and Henry Richardson, Cornell professor of architecture. That will be followed, during the balance of the day, by the conference's five major sessions, with 16 papers presented on the themes: "Old and New Development Paradigms, Higher Education, and the Basis of Gender Inequality: General Issues and Approaches," "Theoretical and Policy Issues on Human and Women's Rights in Higher Education," "Gender and Women's Issues in Labor and Higher Education in Specific Case Studies," "Women and Epistemological and Phenomenological Questions of Change: What Science and Which Knowledge?" and "Major Issues and Looking Forward." Some of the papers may be published in JEDIRAF (Journal of Comparative Education and International Relations in Africa) the refereed journal of CEPARRED.

CEPARRED, whose board of directors will meet on Saturday, is a nonsectarian and non-profit institution that is affiliated with the Ivorian Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research, with headquarters in Abidjan. The conference at Cornell is the first of a two-part CEPARRED seminar, with the second scheduled for July 2002 in Abidjan.

Co-sponsors of the conference at Cornell include: the Center for the Study of Inequality; the vice provost for diversity and faculty development; Africana Studies and Research Center; Department of Education; Program on Gender and Global Change; Cornell International Program of Food, Agriculture and Development; Cornell Institute of Public Affairs; Institute for African Development; Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies; Institute of European Studies; Office of the Dean of the College of Architecture, Art and Planning; South East Asian Program; and International Students and Scholars Office. An additional cosponsor is the Office of the Dean of Wells College.

A complete conference schedule can be accessed online at http://www.arts.cornell.edu/poverty/ . For further information, contact N'Dri Assié-Lumumba at nal@cornell.edu or at 255-7839.

March 28, 2002

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