Human
Education, Human Capital, and Professional Integration in the Global Knowledge Economy
African and Canadian Perspectives on Learning, Development, Mentorship, and the Future of Work
Issue Overview
Education is more than schooling. It is the architecture of human possibility. It determines whether children become readers, whether teachers become mentors, whether newcomers become full contributors, whether nations become innovative, and whether societies transform human talent into dignity, productivity, belonging, and sustainable development.
This special thematic issue of the Interdisciplinary Research Journal & Archives (IRJAR) explores education as a foundation for human capital, technological transformation, professional integration, and social inclusion. It brings together African and Canadian perspectives to examine how societies can move beyond credentials and build education systems that produce real learning, useful skills, ethical leadership, employability, innovation, and human flourishing.
The issue begins with a featured policy analysis on Sub-Saharan Africa’s education crisis, focusing on education finance, learning poverty, human capital, technological sovereignty, and the failure to align schooling with industrial transformation. It then expands the conversation to Canada, where education systems face urgent questions related to equity, Indigenous education, immigrant integration, rural and northern schooling, teacher shortages, mentorship, professional certification, and the recognition of foreign-trained professionals.
How can education systems transform human potential into learning, dignity, productivity, belonging, and national development?
Why This Issue Matters
Education is central to human development, economic productivity, democratic participation, social mobility, technological innovation, and sustainable development. Yet many education systems continue to struggle with underfinancing, weak learning outcomes, inequality, professional barriers, and poor alignment between schooling and the future of work.
This issue matters because it connects two major global concerns. First, many African countries continue to face a crisis of schooling without learning, where expanded access to education has not consistently produced literacy, numeracy, scientific capacity, employability, or technological independence. Second, Canada continues to attract highly educated immigrants and foreign-trained professionals, yet many face credential-recognition barriers, underemployment, professional isolation, and difficulty transferring their knowledge into meaningful contribution.
Editorial Note
Education, Human Capital, and the Moral Economy of Opportunity
Education is often described as a right, a public good, and a pathway to opportunity. Yet in practice, education systems frequently reproduce inequality when they fail to provide real learning, professional recognition, social inclusion, and meaningful pathways into work and public life.
This issue of IRJAR examines education through a broad interdisciplinary lens. It asks how education can help societies develop human capital, strengthen institutions, promote dignity, reduce poverty, advance technological innovation, and support professional integration.
The featured article on Sub-Saharan Africa challenges policymakers to move beyond enrolment statistics and confront the deeper crisis of learning, financing, governance, research capacity, and technological dependency. The Canadian-focused articles extend the discussion by examining how education systems, professional bodies, employers, and mentorship programs can better support foreign-trained teachers and internationally educated professionals.
The issue’s guiding conviction is simple but powerful: societies grow when they invest seriously in human potential. That investment must begin with children learning to read, but it must not end there. It must continue through teacher preparation, technical training, higher education, lifelong learning, professional recognition, and inclusive labour-market participation.
Table of Contents
- Editorial: Education, Human Capital, and the Moral Economy of Opportunity
- Schooling Without Learning: Education Finance, Human Capital, and the Struggle for Technological Sovereignty in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Rethinking Education in Canada: Equity, Inclusion, and Human Capital in a Multicultural Society
- Mentoring Foreign-Trained Teachers in Canada: Bridging Professional Experience, Certification, and Classroom Integration
- From Credentials to Contribution: Supporting Foreign-Trained Professionals in Canada’s Labour Market
- From Brain Waste to Brain Gain: Rethinking Canada’s Use of Immigrant Human Capital
- Education as a Pathway to Belonging: Newcomers, Skills Recognition, and Social Mobility in Canada
- Practitioner Interview: Supporting Foreign-Trained Teachers in Canadian Schools
| No. | Article Title | Article Type | Subject Area | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Editorial: Education, Human Capital, and the Moral Economy of Opportunity | Editorial | Education and Development Studies | Editorial Introduction |
| 2 | Schooling Without Learning: Education Finance, Human Capital, and the Struggle for Technological Sovereignty in Sub-Saharan Africa | Policy Analysis Article / Literature-Based Review | Education and Development Studies | Featured Article |
| 3 | Rethinking Education in Canada: Equity, Inclusion, and Human Capital in a Multicultural Society | Review Article / Policy Analysis | Canadian Education / Comparative Education | Forthcoming |
| 4 | Mentoring Foreign-Trained Teachers in Canada: Bridging Professional Experience, Certification, and Classroom Integration | Practice-Based Article / Policy Review | Teacher Education / Professional Integration | Forthcoming |
| 5 | From Credentials to Contribution: Supporting Foreign-Trained Professionals in Canada’s Labour Market | Policy Analysis / Applied Research Article | Professional Integration / Workforce Development | Forthcoming |
| 6 | From Brain Waste to Brain Gain: Rethinking Canada’s Use of Immigrant Human Capital | Policy Analysis Article | Immigration, Human Capital, and Labour-Market Integration | Forthcoming |
| 7 | Education as a Pathway to Belonging: Newcomers, Skills Recognition, and Social Mobility in Canada | Conceptual Article / Literature Review | Immigration, Education, and Social Inclusion | Forthcoming |
| 8 | Practitioner Interview: Supporting Foreign-Trained Teachers in Canadian Schools | Practitioner Interview / Professional Reflection | Teacher Mentorship / Professional Integration | Forthcoming |
Featured Article
Schooling Without Learning: Education Finance, Human Capital, and the Struggle for Technological Sovereignty in Sub-Saharan Africa
This article examines the relationship between education financing, learning outcomes, human capital formation, and technological development in Sub-Saharan Africa. It argues that the region’s education crisis is not simply a problem of school enrolment, but a structural development crisis involving underinvestment, inefficient spending, weak governance, poor learning outcomes, and the failure to align education systems with industrial transformation.
Drawing on UNESCO, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the African Development Bank, the African Union, and African intellectual traditions, the article explores why expanded access to schooling has not consistently produced literacy, numeracy, scientific competence, employability, research capacity, or technological sovereignty. It compares Sub-Saharan Africa with selected East Asian experiences, including South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong, and China, where education became closely connected to state-led development, industrial upgrading, and technological catch-up.
| Article Type | Policy Analysis Article / Literature-Based Review |
|---|---|
| Primary Subject Area | Education and Development Studies |
| Secondary Areas | Comparative Education; Education Finance; Human Capital Development; African Development Studies; Public Policy; Sustainable Development; Science, Technology, and Innovation Policy |
| Peer Review Status | Under Review / To be updated by IRJAR Editorial Office |
| DOI | To be assigned |
Forthcoming Contributions
Rethinking Education in Canada: Equity, Inclusion, and Human Capital in a Multicultural Society
This article will examine Canada’s education system through the lens of equity, inclusion, Indigenous education, immigrant learners, rural and northern education, multilingual classrooms, mental health, and the future of work.
Mentoring Foreign-Trained Teachers in Canada: Bridging Professional Experience, Certification, and Classroom Integration
This article will examine how structured mentorship can support internationally educated teachers as they navigate certification, Canadian classroom expectations, curriculum, assessment, inclusive education, and school culture.
From Credentials to Contribution: Supporting Foreign-Trained Professionals in Canada’s Labour Market
This article will explore credential recognition, underemployment, deskilling, professional networks, employer bias, bridging programs, and pathways for internationally trained professionals to contribute fully to Canada.
From Brain Waste to Brain Gain: Rethinking Canada’s Use of Immigrant Human Capital
This article will argue that Canada must move from brain waste to brain gain by improving credential recognition, mentorship, employer education, professional bridging, and fair recognition of international experience.
Education as a Pathway to Belonging: Newcomers, Skills Recognition, and Social Mobility in Canada
This article will explore how education, language learning, professional upgrading, community learning, and lifelong learning help newcomers build belonging, confidence, and social mobility.
Practitioner Interview: Supporting Foreign-Trained Teachers in Canadian Schools
This feature will bring practical insight from an educator, school administrator, mentor teacher, certification expert, or foreign-trained teacher who has navigated the Canadian education system.
Peer-Review and Publication Transparency
Articles published in this special issue undergo editorial screening and peer review according to IRJAR’s publication standards. Each article page should clearly display article type, subject area, peer-review status, received date, accepted date, published date, DOI, license, conflict-of-interest statement, and funding statement where applicable.
| Metadata Field | Recommended Display |
|---|---|
| Article Type | Policy Analysis Article / Review Article / Practice-Based Article / Editorial |
| Subject Area | Education and Development Studies; Canadian Education; Professional Integration |
| Peer Review Status | Under Review / Accepted after Peer Review / Published |
| Dates | Received; Revised; Accepted; Published |
| DOI | To be assigned by IRJAR |
| Declarations | Conflict of Interest; Funding Statement; Author Contribution where applicable |
Call for Papers
Education, Human Capital, and Professional Integration in the Global Knowledge Economy
The Interdisciplinary Research Journal & Archives (IRJAR) invites submissions for a special thematic issue on education, human capital, and professional integration in the global knowledge economy.
This issue welcomes interdisciplinary contributions that examine education as a foundation for human development, professional dignity, technological transformation, social inclusion, and sustainable development. We especially encourage submissions that connect research to policy, practice, community experience, and underrepresented perspectives.
| Theme | Possible Topics |
|---|---|
| African Education and Development | Education finance, learning poverty, STEM education, TVET, higher education, research capacity, technological sovereignty, African knowledge production. |
| Canadian Education | Equity, inclusion, Indigenous education, immigrant learners, rural and northern education, multilingual classrooms, teacher shortages, student well-being. |
| Foreign-Trained Teachers | Mentorship, certification, classroom integration, professional identity, school leadership, teacher induction, and professional development. |
| Foreign-Trained Professionals | Credential recognition, underemployment, brain waste, bridging programs, professional licensing, mentorship, and labour-market integration. |
| Human Capital and the Future of Work | Skills development, employability, workforce transformation, artificial intelligence, lifelong learning, and sustainable development. |
Accepted Article Types
| Article Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Original Research Article | Presents original fieldwork, interviews, surveys, statistical analysis, or case-study data. |
| Review Article | Synthesizes existing literature on a defined topic. |
| Policy Analysis Article | Examines a policy problem and proposes evidence-based recommendations. |
| Practice-Based Article | Connects professional experience, applied practice, and scholarly reflection. |
| Conceptual Article | Develops a theoretical or analytical argument. |
| Practitioner Interview | Presents professional insights from educators, mentors, administrators, or policymakers. |
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