Learn History, think unity: National integration through History education in Cameroon, 1961-2018

R. Ndille
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Since independence, one of the greatest worries of African states has been how to maintain national cohesion amongst the multiplicity of ethnic groups which characterize them. My aim in this paper is to show that, other factors notwithstanding, national integration had been a major educational ideology in Cameroon and that it contributed to the peace and stability that the country was known for, amidst a turbulent central African region until the advent of neoliberalism and multiparty politics in 1990. I discuss the nature of contents that helped to achieve this while arguing that a de-emphasis on the social sciences and particularly on the integrationist approach to history education in the multiparty era is not unconnected to the post-1990 reinvention of various parochial identities antithetic to national cohesion in which recent calls for the secession of the Anglophone region by some radical groups is seen as the culmination of the trend. I conclude by highlighting the social relevance of curriculum within which history education should be re-invented as a vector for peace, unity and national integration in the country.
学习历史,思考团结:喀麦隆历史教育中的民族融合,1961-2018
自独立以来,非洲国家最大的担忧之一是如何在具有其特点的众多种族群体之间保持民族凝聚力。我在本文中的目的是表明,尽管存在其他因素,但民族一体化一直是喀麦隆的主要教育意识形态,并且在1990年新自由主义和多党政治出现之前,在动荡的中非地区,它有助于该国所知的和平与稳定。我讨论了有助于实现这一目标的内容的本质,同时认为,在多党制时代,对社会科学,特别是对历史教育的整合主义方法的不重视,与1990年后各种与民族凝聚力对立的狭隘身份的重新创造并非没有关系,最近一些激进团体呼吁脱离英语地区,这被视为这一趋势的高潮。最后,我强调了课程的社会意义,在这个课程中,历史教育应该被重新发明,成为该国和平、团结和民族一体化的载体。
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