Variations in non-state service provision are a relatively understudied dimension of wellbeing inequality in sub-Saharan Africa. This study from Madagascar documents long-term associations between nineteenth-century missionary education and the availability of private schools today. The article exploits an original data set with unusually detailed information on missionary education and contemporary local private school supply. The results indicate high levels of persistence in non-state schooling at the geographic level. The long tradition of faith-based education appears to contribute to religious differences that overlap only imperfectly with more widely studied ethnic divides.
196
Views
0
CrossRef citations
Altmetric
be0ef6915d1b2200a248b7195d01ef22
Articles
Historical Origins of Uneven Service Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa. The Role of Non-State Providers
Pages 1614-1630
Accepted 10 Mar 2014
Published online: 13 Aug 2014