There are multiple sides to every story. But when it comes to Eritrea, a country that鈥檚 been isolated due to 20 years of war and nine years of sanctions, much of their story hasn鈥檛 been told, said Carol Pineau, a former CNN journalist who reported live on the Eritrean-Ethiopian war and is a visiting scholar at 亚洲AV.
This summer, faculty from Mason鈥檚聽聽took 11 PhD, master鈥檚 and undergraduate students to Eritrea for two weeks to uncover the country鈥檚 narrative of development.
鈥淚t鈥檚 exceptional for the聽聽in the country to be going into Eritrea鈥攁 place like that is post-conflict in real time,鈥 said Pineau, who added that she believes the trip was the first open enrollment study-abroad program to Eritrea from any U.S. university.
Very few articles have been written on Eritrean development, so the best way to understand it is to go there, said Pineau, who co-led the trip with Mason professor聽.
During the trip organized by Pineau and the center鈥檚 director聽, Mason students met with Eritrean ministry heads, spanning health, social welfare, education, agriculture and national development, and information representatives from the United Nations and several ambassadors. Venturing out of the capital, they saw development projects firsthand, including a referral hospital for pediatric and maternal care, reforestation and terracing projects for soil and water conservation, dams to improve drinking water, and more. They also met with Eritrea鈥檚 best-known writers (including the author of their national anthem), and toured the battlefields with the commander who led the decisive battle that ended the fighting.
鈥淪ocial justice is one of their highest values [the ministry heads] spoke about,鈥 said Friderike Butler, a graduate student in Mason鈥檚聽聽Program. 鈥淎ny approach for development has to be good for the community, it has to afford equality for all the stakeholders involved, it has to be good for the environment and it has to be sustainable.鈥
鈥淲hat surprised me is that we actually have an African country that is addressing the idea of development that is self-driven, self-propelled,鈥 said聽聽PhD student Gbenga Dasylva.
Eritrea has a negative reputation in the world press, Dasylva said, and it is often seen as stubborn or threatening for not receiving outside aid. The country has no World Bank, no NGOs and no international players at the table developing their programs. Even so, they鈥檙e one of the few countries in Africa that is meeting the sustainable development goals set by the United Nations.
How are they excelling without aid?
They鈥檙e focused on African-led solutions to African challenges, said Pineau, who added that their story challenges the narrative that development happens because the global north finds the solution.
鈥淭he [development] programs they鈥檙e putting in place are really amazing,鈥 said Butler, who cited one example as the Minimum Integrated Household Agricultural Package, a program that allows Eritrean families to learn skills in organic farming, feed their family, generate an income and help their neighbors do the same.
Eritrea鈥檚 innovative work could benefit the rest of the developing world by learning from their unique and locally driven solutions, Pineau said. The experience has also had an impact on students.
Dasylva said he was so inspired by Eritrea that he changed his dissertation to look at development happening there, and how it can be a model for the rest of Africa.
鈥淭here is a need for us scholars of international relations to address issues contextually and to start rethinking how we define concepts like development, peace building and governance,鈥 Dasylva said.
Development isn鈥檛 the creation of buildings, Dasylva said. 鈥淒evelopment is: Do the people have quality of life? Are they able to sustain themselves? Eritrea has been able to address this.鈥
During the trip, students recorded interviews and gathered documentation of Eritrea鈥檚 people and history.