Global Citizenship Education

Philosophy, Theory and Pedagogy

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The essays in this edited collection argue that global citizenship education realistically must be set against the imperfections of our contemporary political realities. As a form of education it must actively engage in a critically informed way with a set of complex inherited historical issues that emerge out of a colonial past and the savage globalization which often perpetuates unequal power relations or cause new inequalities. The essays in the book explore these issues and the emergent world ideologies of globalism, as well as present territorial conflicts, ethnic, tribal and nationalist rivalries, problems of increasing international migration and asylum, growing regional imbalances and increasing world inequalities. Contributors to this collection, each on their own way, argues that global citizenship education needs to project new values, to reality test and debate the language, concepts and theories of global citizenship and the proto-world institutions that seek to give expression to nascent aspirations for international forms of social justice and citizen participation in world government. Many of the contributors argue that global citizenship education offers the prospect of extending the liberal ideologies of human rights and multiculturalism, and of developing a better understanding of forms of post-colonialism. One thing is sure, as the essays presented in this book demonstrate so clearly, there can be no one dominant notion of global citizenship education as notions of ‘global’, ‘citizenship’ and ‘education’ are all contested and open to further argument and revision. Global citizenship education does not name the moment of global citizenship or even its emergence so much as the hope of a form of order where the rights of the individual and of cultural groups, irrespective of race, gender, ethnicity or creed, are observed, preserved and protected by all governments in order to become the basis of citizen participation in new global spaces that we might be tempted to call global civil society.

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Introduction
Many Faces of Global Civil Society: Possible Futures for Global Citizenship
Pages: 1–13
Two Meanings of Global Citizenship
Modern and Diverse
Pages: 15–39
Between Empires
Rethinking Identity and Citizenship in the Context of Globalisation
Pages: 53–70
Cosmopolitan Justice
Education and Global Citizenship
Pages: 71–85
Revisioning Ideas of Citizenry
The Female State and the Construction of Citizenship
Pages: 87–102
Diasporic Philosophy, Homelessness, and Counter-Education in Context
The Israeli–Palestinian Example
Pages: 103–114
Conflicting Imaginaries
Global Citizenship Education in Canada as a Site of Contestation
Pages: 115–131
Cosmopolitanism, the Citizen and Processes of Abjection:
The Double Gestures of Pedagogy
Pages: 133–152
Cosmopolitanism
With or Without Patriotism?
Pages: 169–185
Dialogues across the Pond
Freire and Greene on the Citizenship Challenge in the Republic of Ireland
Pages: 221–230
A ‘Community of Communities’?
Racism, Ethnicity and Education in Post-Devolution Scotland
Pages: 231–243
MacIntyre’s Theory of Virtues:
An Ethics-for-Citizenship Education?
By: Klas Roth
Pages: 245–260
Globalisation, the ThirdWay and Education Post 9/11
Building Democratic Citizenship
Pages: 261–282
Revolutions within
Self-government and Self-esteem
Pages: 283–298
Challenging the Dominant Neo-Liberal Discourse
From Human Capital Learning to Education for Civic Engagement
Pages: 299–315
Citizenship Education and Diversity
Implications for Teacher Education
Pages: 317–331
Immigrants and Religious Conflict
Insider Accounts of Italian, Lithuanian and Polish Catholics in Scotland
Pages: 333–349
A Social Justice Approach to Education for Active Citizenship
An International Perspective
Pages: 381–393
Citizenship and Its Discontents
Educating for Political and Economic Development in Sub-Saharan Africa
Pages: 395–407
Education Implies Citizenship
Developing a Global Dimension in Dutch Education
Pages: 445–458
Global Citizens, Local Linguists
How Migrant Children Explore Cultural Identity through Vernacular Texts
Pages: 459–476
Between Europe and Africa
Against Regionalism in Citizenship Education
Pages: 491–501
Educational Researchers and their students
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