Journal ArticleOpen Access
Girls’ education in Balochistan, Pakistan: exploring a postcolonial Islamic governmentality
Authors
Author Affiliations
RMIT University
Published InBritish Journal of Sociology of Education
Year2022
Citations3
Abstract
This paper explores the status of girls’ education in the schools of rural Balochistan in Pakistan, and examines the dimensions of access, enrolment and retention. In order to explore the complexities of this governmental problem, we will propose the concept of postcolonial Islamic governmentality. Drawing on Foucault’s work on the arts of government, with Dean’s (2010 D. Mitchell, ed. 2010. Governmentality: Power and Rule in Modern Society. Los Angeles, London: Sage. [Google Scholar]) writing on illiberal governmentalities, and the work of Salehin (2016 Salehin, M. M. 2016. Islamic NGOs in Bangladesh: Development, Piety and Neoliberal Governmentality. Oxford: Taylor and Francis Group.[Crossref] , [Google Scholar]) on pious governmentality in Bangladesh, we will suggest that postcolonial Islamic governmentalities emerge at the intersections…
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