Privatization In Bangladesh

Privatization In Bangladesh

Author: Clare E Humphrey

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-06-04

Total Pages: 216

ISBN-13: 1000308170

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Bangladesh, the world's poorest large country, has privatized more state-owned industries than any other developing nation. This policy-orientated study traces Bangladesh's economic fortunes in its British, Pakistani and independent periods. Around the theme of a traditional society coping with modernization, the study analyzes in depth the effects


Privatization in Bangladesh

Privatization in Bangladesh

Author: Clare E. Humphrey

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-09-27

Total Pages: 276

ISBN-13: 9780367284305

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Bangladesh, the world's poorest large country, has privatized more state-owned industries than any other developing nation. This policy-orientated study traces Bangladesh's economic fortunes in its British, Pakistani and independent periods.


Privatization Commission, Bangladesh

Privatization Commission, Bangladesh

Author:

Publisher:

Published:

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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The Privatization Commission has the overall responsibility of privatizing state owned enterprises (SOEs) identified for privatization in Bangladesh. The Web site provides information on SOEs that have been or will be privatized, the processes of tendering and privatizing, methods used, opportunities for foreigners and the institutional framework of the commission.


Privatisation in Bangladesh

Privatisation in Bangladesh

Author: Rehman Sobhan

Publisher:

Published: 2005-01-01

Total Pages: 241

ISBN-13: 9789840517046

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Contributed articles presented earlier in a seminar in August 1996 organized by Centre for Policy Dialogue


The Privatisation of Higher Education in Postcolonial Bangladesh

The Privatisation of Higher Education in Postcolonial Bangladesh

Author: Ariful H. Kabir

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2021-05-16

Total Pages: 150

ISBN-13: 1000387763

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This book problematises contemporary realities of the political dimension of the privatisation of higher education in Bangladesh. By exploring the complexities of neoliberalism as an economic and ideological doctrine, a mode of governance, and as a policy package, it considers the ‘post’ attached to and hyphenated with ‘colonialism’ as more aspirational than achieved. Based on an interdisciplinary study involving contemporary theories from political and social sciences, economics, and the socio-economics of education, the book explores the unique ways in which Bangladeshi higher education has evolved over the past four decades, and the complex politics behind its privatisation. Through an empirically based account of how neoliberalism has worked its way through the higher education sector in the fastest growing economy in the South Asian context, it discusses how changes have been characterised by policy reforms, massification, and a sustained friction between control and autonomy in the university sector. The authors take a nuanced approach to their geo-political and onto-epistemological positionalities as diasporic and hybridised scholars by rejecting epistemological exclusion inherent in the colonial present and research conducted in such contexts. This position allows the reinforcement of a colonial present, theorising from within Global South decolonial and postcolonial research literature. This book contributes to discourses of ‘globalisation from above’ and ‘globalisation from below’ and sheds light on the often-idiosyncratic ways in which higher education reform has unfolded in South Asia. It will be of interest to comparative educators and those researching higher education policy and education developments in Global South nations.