Theory and practice of learning to be a citizen: Experiences from Tanzania and Uganda (CS-LEARN)

Book cover for learning, philosophy, and African citizenship

Table of contents

Project duration
-
Core fields of research
Languages, culture and society
Research areas
Sustainable Societies
Department
Department of Social Sciences and Philosophy
Faculty
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences

Project description

Theory and practice of learning to be a citizen: Experiences from Tanzania and Uganda. (CS-LEARN) (2018-2022)

 Introduction

CS-LEARN is a consortium project between the Ģֱ and the University of Oulu. The consortium connects two groups: the research group on Civil Society and Citizenship in Development (CitDe) led by PI, Academy of Finland Research Fellow Tiina Kontinen at the Ģֱ (JYU), and the Theory and Philosophy of Education Research Group ( led by the leader of the sub-project, Prof. Katariina Holma at the University of Oulu.  It expands the team’s ongoing research project Growth into Citizenship in Civil Society Encounters (GROW) (AoF 2015-2019), which explores ideas of citizenships in NGO-interventions and among community members in Tanzania and Uganda in connection with a notion of learning as growth based on philosophical pragmatism and especially the work of John Dewey,

While it is widely agreed that transformative development require competent citizens able to organize in civil society spaces, less is known about the complexities related to learning to be a citizen. The development research literature has shown gaps between development ideals and contextual lives experiences, and thus, has motivated the team to explore both the localized conceptions and theoretical conceptualizations. The project scrutinizes the theories, practices and experiences of learning to be a citizen in civil society with case studies in Tanzania and Uganda. CS-LEARN combines research groups with complementary expertise in development research and educational philosophy from the Universities of Jyväskylä (JYU) and Oulu, and partners with  adult education in Makerere University, Uganda and development studies at the University of Dodoma, Tanzania.

To reach the overall objective of developing a theory of learning to be a citizen in civil society the project aims to: 1) identify and compare definitions, conceptualizations and manifestations of a “good citizen” in theories, CSO practices and experiences; 2) identify and compare conceptualizations, descriptions, and experiences of processes of learning to be a citizen in theories, CSO agendas and participation processes. The consortium applies a combination of three methodologies: a) rational reconstruction of philosophical and educational theories; b) ethnography of CSO-interventions and everyday participation in Uganda and Tanzania with specific focus on self-help and religious groups; and c) critical action research among women groups in marginalized areas. Research material will comprise of selected theories of education and related philosophical literature, observations, documents, interviews and participatory exercises with community members and CSOs.

The project is funded by the Academy of Finland's Programme for Development Research, and it includes capacity-building of African partner universities through joint research seminars and methodology courses with practice period in communities. The project pays special attention to building of research capacity by enabling working periods for African postdocs in Finnish Universities.

The academic outcomes contribute to literatures of contextualized citizenship and civil society in development research and to contemporary theory of citizens’ education. Societal impact will be enabled by the creation of theoretical tools for designing civil society interventions for reaching the transformative development outlined in Agenda2030.