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Geopolitics and funding for literacy programs |
| Discussion | |
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Geopolitical trends affect funding for literacy programs in various and significant ways. In every country, funding for development comes from sources such as local, national, and international agencies, the private sector, and industry. Such funding is always subject to competing priorities. At the international level, funding for development activities is subject not just to economic realities, but also to political realities and changes. | |
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One recent geopolitical event, above all others, has had a major impact on the availability of funding for literacy--the end of the Cold War between the East and the West. | |
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During the Cold War, the Eastern and Western Blocs regularly competed for the political support of the countries of the developing world. A major arena of this competition was development funding for schools, highways, dams, jobs, agricultural development, the building of sports stadiums, hard and soft loans, military assistance, and literacy. Leaders of developing countries could count on getting substantial assistance from both Blocs and often played one off against the other. | |
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With the end of the Cold War, the developing world was faced with major changes: | |
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On top of this harsh change in economic realities, many developing nations find themselves strained by problems such as | |
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To make a gloomy picture even worse, many of the Western Bloc nations who had been so generous in the past began confronting their own economic problems such as | |
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The net result is that external funding for literacy has become highly competitive and difficult to obtain. In all likelihood, those in the field will need to develop alternative and innovative sources of funding for literacy, most likely from the private sector. | |
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Page content last modified: 1 October 1999 |
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© 1999 SIL International |