Socio-Cultural and Economic Factors Affecting Primary Education of Maasai Girls in Loitokitok District, Kenya.
The Western Journal of Black Studies 2011, Winter, 35, 4
-
- 2,99 €
-
- 2,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
Background of the Problem United Nations (1993) and Children's Act (2001) recognize that education is a basic human right that every child must enjoy. Kenya is a signatory to these and other international conventions. The International Convention on Human Rights (1948), Article 26 (1) as well states that everyone has the right to education and that education shall be free at least in the primary stages. Further, it declares that primary education shall be compulsory.
Altri libri di The Western Journal of Black Studies
Rap Music As an Extension of the Black Rhetorical Tradition: "Keepin' It Real".
2002
Jung and the African Diaspora (Carl Gustav Jung) (Critical Essay)
2006
Baldwin's Harlem a Biography of James Baldwin (Book Review)
2010
African-American Women's Feelings on Alienation from Third-Wave Feminism: A Conversation with My Sisters.
2005
The Obama Campaign 2008: a Historical Overview (Report)
2009
Racial Preferences in Internet Dating: A Comparison of Four Birth Cohorts (The Silent Generation (Individuals Born in 1942 Or Before), The Baby Boomers (Those Born Between 1943 and 1960), Generation X (Those Born Between 1961 and 1981), and the Millennium Generation (Those Born After 1981)) (Report)
2009