Vocational Education and Training for Sustainability in South Africa: The Role of Public and Private Provision

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Vocational Education and Training for Sustainability in South Africa: The Role of Public and Private Provision
Abstract
Written in the twilight of the Mbeki Presidency, this paper considers the role that skills development has in the sustainability of the South African political-economic project. It explores some of the disarticulations of public policy and argues that these both undermine public sector delivery and open up opportunities for private provision to be, under certain circumstances, more responsive to the challenges of national development. We argue that there is a possibility that the state could work more smartly with both sets of providers. Crucially, however, this would necessitate working more smartly within itself. This was a major plank of the Mbeki strategy but it has failed conspicuously with regard to the Education-Labour relationship. Whether a new President can achieve a radical reworking of this relationship may be an important indicator of the viability of any new development project. (Contains 1 table.)
Publication
International Journal of Educational Development
Date
2009
Language
en
Loc. in Archive
DOI-10.1016/j.ijedudev.2008.09.008
Citation
McGrath, S., & Akoojee, S. (2009). Vocational Education and Training for Sustainability in South Africa: The Role of Public and Private Provision. International Journal of Educational Development. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijedudev.2008.09.008