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Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa

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Personen und Körperschaften: Shule, Vicensia
Titel: Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa
Format: E-Artikel
Sprache: Swahili
veröffentlicht:
Online-Ausg.. 2015
Gesamtaufnahme: , Swahili Forum 21 (2014), S. 26-39
Schlagwörter:
Quelle: Qucosa
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520 |a Theatre for Development (TfD) is a process whereby the community uses theatre, especially African traditional theatre forms, to address their development issues. In Tanzania, TfD came as a result of many factors; poor communication approaches used by the state in addressing development in the late 1970s, the economic crisis of the 1970s, the implementation of IMF and World Bank pressure to adopt Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs) among others. Liberal policies imposed mostly from Euro-America proposed non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to replace the state in addressing development, as they were perceived to be more democratic and less authoritative. Most of the supported activities of NGOs became those linked to development or that are in the position to bring about development in the fields of health, sanitation, education, gender, and democracy. Therefore, even theatre that was supported by donors was linked to or addressed ‘development’. In most cases, funding institutions have their own objectives, missions, and goals to fulfil. This paper tries to question the role of TfD in present Tanzania. It argues that, since most of the TfD projects have been funded by foreign donors and communities have no economic control of their own development concerns, it is clear that TfD is playing a double deal, community empowerment on the one hand and disempowerment on the other. 
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contents Theatre for Development (TfD) is a process whereby the community uses theatre, especially African traditional theatre forms, to address their development issues. In Tanzania, TfD came as a result of many factors; poor communication approaches used by the state in addressing development in the late 1970s, the economic crisis of the 1970s, the implementation of IMF and World Bank pressure to adopt Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs) among others. Liberal policies imposed mostly from Euro-America proposed non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to replace the state in addressing development, as they were perceived to be more democratic and less authoritative. Most of the supported activities of NGOs became those linked to development or that are in the position to bring about development in the fields of health, sanitation, education, gender, and democracy. Therefore, even theatre that was supported by donors was linked to or addressed ‘development’. In most cases, funding institutions have their own objectives, missions, and goals to fulfil. This paper tries to question the role of TfD in present Tanzania. It argues that, since most of the TfD projects have been funded by foreign donors and communities have no economic control of their own development concerns, it is clear that TfD is playing a double deal, community empowerment on the one hand and disempowerment on the other.
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spelling Shule, Vicensia, Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa, Online-Ausg. 2015 Online-Ressource (Text) Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig, Theatre for Development (TfD) is a process whereby the community uses theatre, especially African traditional theatre forms, to address their development issues. In Tanzania, TfD came as a result of many factors; poor communication approaches used by the state in addressing development in the late 1970s, the economic crisis of the 1970s, the implementation of IMF and World Bank pressure to adopt Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs) among others. Liberal policies imposed mostly from Euro-America proposed non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to replace the state in addressing development, as they were perceived to be more democratic and less authoritative. Most of the supported activities of NGOs became those linked to development or that are in the position to bring about development in the fields of health, sanitation, education, gender, and democracy. Therefore, even theatre that was supported by donors was linked to or addressed ‘development’. In most cases, funding institutions have their own objectives, missions, and goals to fulfil. This paper tries to question the role of TfD in present Tanzania. It argues that, since most of the TfD projects have been funded by foreign donors and communities have no economic control of their own development concerns, it is clear that TfD is playing a double deal, community empowerment on the one hand and disempowerment on the other., Tanzania, Theater, Entwicklungshilfe, Theatre For Development, Swahili Forum 21 (2014), S. 26-39, text/html https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-162799 Online-Zugriff
spellingShingle Shule, Vicensia, Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa, Theatre for Development (TfD) is a process whereby the community uses theatre, especially African traditional theatre forms, to address their development issues. In Tanzania, TfD came as a result of many factors; poor communication approaches used by the state in addressing development in the late 1970s, the economic crisis of the 1970s, the implementation of IMF and World Bank pressure to adopt Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs) among others. Liberal policies imposed mostly from Euro-America proposed non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to replace the state in addressing development, as they were perceived to be more democratic and less authoritative. Most of the supported activities of NGOs became those linked to development or that are in the position to bring about development in the fields of health, sanitation, education, gender, and democracy. Therefore, even theatre that was supported by donors was linked to or addressed ‘development’. In most cases, funding institutions have their own objectives, missions, and goals to fulfil. This paper tries to question the role of TfD in present Tanzania. It argues that, since most of the TfD projects have been funded by foreign donors and communities have no economic control of their own development concerns, it is clear that TfD is playing a double deal, community empowerment on the one hand and disempowerment on the other., Tanzania, Theater, Entwicklungshilfe, Theatre For Development
title Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa
title_auth Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa
title_full Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa
title_fullStr Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa
title_full_unstemmed Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa
title_in_hierarchy
title_short Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa
title_sort sanaa kwa maendeleo tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa
title_unstemmed Sanaa kwa maendeleo Tanzania: kati ya kujiweza na kuwezwa
topic Tanzania, Theater, Entwicklungshilfe, Theatre For Development
topic_facet Tanzania, Theater, Entwicklungshilfe, Theatre For Development
url https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-162799
urn urn:nbn:de:bsz:15-qucosa-162799
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