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First published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Through a multi-country study, "Comparative Perspectives on
International School Leadership "examines the current global spread
of educational leadership, occurring rapidly and widely. Exploring
five international case studies of leadership policy, preparation,
and practice under the framework of policy borrowing and
adaptation, Magno attempts to understand and account for
commonalities and differences across country contexts. Rather than
assuming a particular model or theory to leadership is best,
"Comparative Perspectives on International School Leadership" takes
a policy-oriented perspective and considers how and why certain
approaches are being formulated and accepted, including an
examination of motivations, influencers, actors, institutions, and
implementation processes. Magno ultimately argues that efforts
toward formalizing educational leadership reflect current global
political objectives to improve schools by increasing
accountability, transparency, and professionalism. This engaging
book will be of interest to scholars and students in the fields of
educational leadership and comparative education.
Through a multi-country study, "Comparative Perspectives on
International School Leadership "examines the current global spread
of educational leadership, occurring rapidly and widely. Exploring
five international case studies of leadership policy, preparation,
and practice under the framework of policy borrowing and
adaptation, Magno attempts to understand and account for
commonalities and differences across country contexts. Rather than
assuming a particular model or theory to leadership is best,
"Comparative Perspectives on International School Leadership" takes
a policy-oriented perspective and considers how and why certain
approaches are being formulated and accepted, including an
examination of motivations, influencers, actors, institutions, and
implementation processes. Magno ultimately argues that efforts
toward formalizing educational leadership reflect current global
political objectives to improve schools by increasing
accountability, transparency, and professionalism. This engaging
book will be of interest to scholars and students in the fields of
educational leadership and comparative education.
Contents: Chapter I. Setting the Israeli Scene Introduction Historical Legacies: Roots of Gender Relations and Ethnic Tension The Functioning of the Formal Political System Women in political parties Women's political parties Women and voting Women in Knesset, committees, ministries Knesset's bureaucratic responses to women Women politicians Legal Arena Military Participation Contemporary Feminist Movement Living in a State of Siege: The Role of Women in the Peace Movement The Emergence of Women's Nongovernmental Organizations Resources and Funding Chapter II. Minding the Political Gap: The need for and development of a concept of political capital Introduction Philosophy and the Public Sphere: Enter Feminist Politics Women and politics: Toward feminist critical theory Women, citizenship and political participation Building Civil Society: Utilizing Social and Political Capital Examining civil society NGOs as learning sites Conceptualizing a New Term: 'Political Capital' Social capital is too diffuse A first consideration of 'political capital' The influence of Bourdieu's cultural capital The influence of Putnam's social capital Trust, norms and networks The influence of political culture Political education Education and democracy Informal education: liberation pedagogy and rights based education Nonformal education: Consciousness-raising Definition of Political capital Political capital in democracy Chapter III. Revealing political capital: Methods of discovery Nature of Study Qualitative research Feminist research Research Methods Research setting Israel Women's Network Bat Shalom Haifa Women's Coalition Research sample Sample size Sample: Socio-demographic description Gaining access to research sites Research Instruments Interviews Interview process Particpant observation Document review Research questions Hypothesis Data Analysis Limitations of Study Transportation Language Religion Time Chapte r IV. NGOs of their own: Women claim public space for political influence Introduction Why are NGOs needed: what gap do they address for women and how do they do that? NGOs create new discourse NGOs help women connect skills with action Women benefit more from women's NGOs than mixed-gender NGOs NGOs politicize traditional voluntary associations There is political power in the group NGOs can create a false illusion of change The formal political sphere is a male sphere The military encourages male political careers NGOs provide increased opportunities for women's political participation Summary The Influence of NGOs on the formal political system NGOs participate in legislation, lobbying and commities Members of Knesset rely on women's NGOs Most women in NGOs would consider running or have run for public office NGOs influence the wider society NGOs influence political parties^ NGOs act as stepping-stones into formal politics for women Perhaps NGOs should be temporary Summary Educational themes in NGOs Rate of university education is high Youth movements and student movements are formative Education in NGOs occurs in two ways: informal and nonformal Women learn skills through NGOs Women gain essential political knowledge via NGOs There is a need for more political training Social norms in women's NGOs differ from social norms in the formal political arena Women from horizontal and vertical networks through NGO participation Summary How does living in a time of protracted Palestinian-Israeli conflict affect women's issues and the work of women's NGOs? The survival of Israel is paramount Military careers are held in higher political esteem than other careers There is overlap between women's and peace NGOs The rise and fall of conflict influences women's participation Military conflict possibly increases levels of violence in the civilian society Conflict creates divided loyalties: nationalist struggle vs. feminist struggle Summary General trends in the three main NGOs Unexpected findings Relations between Israeli women and women from West Bank/Gaza are extremely strained Jewish-Arab coexistence lacks sincerity There are different pathways to NGO activism Chapter Summary Chapter V. Conclusion Introduction Contributions of the study Conclusive data Evidence of political capital From Social movements to NGO activism Social and political implications of NGO research Areas of future research Summary References Appendices Append ix A: Map of Israel Appendix B: Timeline Appendix C: 1999 Election Lists Appendix D: Current Members of Knesset (MKs) Appendix E: Women in the world's parliaments Appendix F: Isreali voting percentages Appendix G: Current Knesset ministers Appendix H: Pre-elections advertisement Appendix I: Letter from Palestinian intellectuals Appendix J: Patterns of movememnt/NGO relationships
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