Buch, Englisch, Band 47, 216 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 454 g
Reihe: Comparative and International Education: Diversity of Voices
Buch, Englisch, Band 47, 216 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 454 g
Reihe: Comparative and International Education: Diversity of Voices
ISBN: 978-90-04-38343-2
Verlag: Brill
This set of essays critically analyze global citizenship by bringing together leading ideas about citizenship and the commons in this time that both needs and resists a global perspective on issues and relations. Education plays a significant role in how we come to address these issues and this volume will contribute to ensuring that equity, global citizenship, and the common wealth provide platforms from which we might engage in transformational, collective work. The authors address the global significance of debates and struggles about belonging and abjection, solidarity and rejection, identification and othering, as well as love and hate.
Global citizenship, as a concept and a practice, is now being met with a dangerous call for insularism and a protracted ethno-nationalism based on global economic imperialism, movements for white supremacy and miscegenation, various forms of religious extremism, and identity politics, but which antithetically, also comes from the anti-globalization movement focused on building strong, sustainable communities. We see a taming of citizens that contributes to the taming of what we understand as the public sphere and the commons, the places of cultural, natural, and intellectual resources that are shared and not privately owned. The work of global citizenship education is distinguishable from the processes of a deadly globalization or destruction of the world that responds to the interlocking issues that make life on the planet precarious for human and non-humans everywhere (albeit an unequal precarity).
This book is an invitation into a conversation that explores and makes visible some of the hidden chasms of oppression and inequity in the world. It is meant to provoke both argument and activism as we work to secure common spaces that are broadly life-sustaining.
Contributors are: Ali A. Abdi, Sung Kyung Ahn, Chouaib El Bouhali, Xochilt Hernández, Carrie Karsgaard, Marlene McKay, Michael O’Sullivan, Christina Palech, Karen Pashby, Karen J. Pheasant-Neganigwane, Thashika Pillay, Ashley Rerrie, Grace J. Rwiza, Toni Samek, Lynette Shultz, Harry Smaller, Crain Soudien, Derek Tannis, and Irene Friesen Wolfstone.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Global Citizenship, Common Wealth, and Uncommon Citizenships: An Introduction
Lynette Shultz and Thashika Pillay
2. The Contradictions of International Education and International Development: Counter-Eurocentric Perspectives
Ali A. Abdi
3. Aboriginal Women, Uncommon Citizens
Marlene E. McKay
4. Cycles of Learning and Unlearning through Literary Study: Reading Marginalized Experience Narratives for Critical Global Citizenship Education
Carrie Karsgaard
5. The Scholarship of Engagement: Moving Higher Education from Isolated Islands to an Inclusive Space
Grace Rwiza and Chouaib El Bouhali
6. Seeking “Global Citizenship” in Graduate Library and Information Studies Education
Toni Samek and Christina Palech
7. The Role of Host Villages in Fostering Cosmopolitan Values among ISL Participants
Harry Smaller, Michael O’Sullivan, Xochilt Hernández and Ashley Rerrie
8. Security in a World of Strangers: Exploring the Lived Meaning of Help Giving to International Students
Derek Tannis
9. Southern Struggles over “Knowing” and Their Significance for the Politics of Global Citizenship
Crain Soudien
10. Dance for Change: Seeking Tribal Citizenship and Identity
Karen J. Pheasant-Neganigwane
11. Global Citizenship Education as a UNESCO Key Theme: More of the Same or Opportunities for Thinking ‘Otherwise’?
Karen Pashby
12. Citizenship and Education for Adult Newcomers
Sung Kyung Ahn
13. Transgressive Learning: Journey to Becoming Ecocentric
Irene Friesen Wolfstone
About the Contributors
Index