The Crucial Role of Teacher Unions in Education Policy

Author
Abrehet Gebremedhin and Clemence Tauya Nhliziyo, ARC Accountability Research Center
Main image
Education in Zimbabwe, Murape Primary School, November 2016
GPE/ Carine Durand
Education in Zimbabwe, Murape Primary School, November 2016

Rethinking Reform: The Role of Teachers' Unions in Education Advocacy in Zimbabwe

Teachers play a fundamental role in implementing educational reforms, yet teachers’ unions are frequently excluded from policy discussions by both policymakers and international aid donors, often being labeled as barriers to change. This exclusion is prevalent in many countries where reform and investment in quality public education are desperately needed.

A newly published Accountability Brief by the Accountability Research Center, a Global Learning Partner of Education Out Loud, delves into the efforts of broad-based, membership-driven organizations—specifically teachers’ unions in Zimbabwe. The brief highlights how these unions navigate restricted civic spaces and build accountability by holding national government stakeholders responsible for implementing promised education reforms. It reveals that the advocacy agendas of teachers’ unions often align with those of other civil society organizations (CSOs) in the education policy arena, particularly in advocating for increased access to quality public education.

For more insights, read the Accountability Brief here 

 

Education Really is For All: The Important but Invisible Successes of Civil Society Activism

This is ARC’s second Accountability Brief as an EOL Global Learning Partner. It follows the May 2024 publication of ARC’s first Accountability Brief, which examined the role of civil society in education policymaking in the Global South. The brief highlights how, over the past 25 years, extensive campaigning, advocacy, and pilot initiatives by civil society organizations have led to a global consensus that all children have the right to attend school and receive an education.

For more insights, read the Accountability Brief here