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Chapter Nine

                 families soon became affluent enough to be able to build their  own
                 houses and to let the low-cost house to expatriate tenants; this
                 activity was never officially condoned, but it was a recognised way of
                 enabling the local population to participate in the Emirate’s wealth.
                 1 his example is not lost on some of the people who own low-cost
                 houses in urban areas of the other Emirates, where there is also a
                 large expatriate population to whom they may let. However, in very
                 many cases the recipient families still enjoy the full use as originally
                 intended and they tend to see such schemes as one of the most
                 tangible signs that the Federation is functioning well.
                   A crucial aspect of the country’s progress over the last ten years is
                 encompassed in the development of its educational system. The
                 quality of education need not depend on whether these facilities are
                 provided by the federal ministry or by the local governments. In
                 practice, however, it was very important for the credibility of the
                 Federation that the federal ministry should be seen to lake over as
                 soon as possible from the government of Kuwait the responsibility
                 for most schools in the northern Emirates; this was done early in
                 1972.147
                   At the inception of the Federation about 20,000 children were
                 attending school in the six northern Emirates, including over 3,000 in
                 Dubai.140 and over 10,000 children were enrolled in government
                 schools in Abu Dhabi. During the school year of 1980/81 a total of
                 108,840 children were studying in schools run by the UAE Ministry
                 of Education and Youth, which had gradually taken over all govern­
                 ment schools in the seven Emirates. The increase in the number of
                 pupils was most dramatic in the towns, namely Abu Dhabi, Dubai
                 and Sharjah, where the children of the Arab expatriate communities
                 enrolled in large numbers in government schools, accounting for up
                 to 80 per cent in some higher classes of secondary schools.149
                   The construction of new schools concentrated on providing at
                 least primary education as near to home as possible, in particular in
                 the small and remote communities of the mountain and desert areas.
                As with housing and road construction, the education ministry's
                efforts contributed to the increasing loyalty to the concept of a federal
                 Slate; and the population willingly accepted penetration of the
                federal administration into the often only rudimentary administ­
                ration of local government. The culmination of these efforts is
                exemplified in the establishment, in Autumn 1976 by the UAE
                Ministry of Education and Youth, of the UAE University located in al

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