Worldwide, access to higher education is still a privilege. This unique
volume recounts the experiences of students from two rural provinces -
one in Pakistan, one in the Republic of Ireland - who have struggled to
undertake graduate studies. Seeking to understand why some are able to
persevere with studies against enormous odds, the authors draw on
Bourdieu's theories of social and cultural capital, habitus, field and
symbolic violence to analyze the students' very personal narratives.
Their study reveals that, while these two provinces may appear on the
surface to be entirely disparate, profound social and economic
inequality in each leads mature students in Sindh and Connaught to
experience similar obstacles - although these are surmounted in
different ways.