|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Children in the Global South continue to be affected by social
disadvantage in our unequal post-colonial world order. With a focus
on working-class children in Latin America, this book explores the
challenges of promoting children’s rights in a context of
decolonization. Liebel and colleagues give insights into the
political lives of children and demonstrate ways in which the
concept of children’s rights can be made meaningful at the
grassroots level. Looking to the future, they consider how
collaborative research with children can counteract their
marginalization and oppression in society.
Children in the Global South continue to be affected by social
disadvantage in our unequal post-colonial world order. With a focus
on working-class children in Latin America, this book explores the
challenges of promoting children’s rights in a context of
decolonization. Liebel and colleagues give insights into the
political lives of children and demonstrate ways in which the
concept of children’s rights can be made meaningful at the
grassroots level. Looking to the future, they consider how
collaborative research with children can counteract their
marginalization and oppression in society.
This book presents research into inclusive education in Central and
Eastern Europe (CEE), written by scholars based in CEE. Inclusive
education has become a framework for understanding and embracing
diversity but most of the research in this area has been carried
out in intercultural or culturally diverse settings within a
relatively inclusive and open framework of democratic/liberal and
multicultural Western societies. Unlike many Western societies, the
realities of CEE countries are often much less diverse and
connected with different fragile historical and political
processes, which puts tackling sensitive topics in a different
context. The editors and contributors address the dominant Western
ways of looking at inclusive and global education in CEE. They
argue that Western leveraged pedagogy has been imposed on CEE and
outline the context-specific problems of teaching global education
in CEE. Collectively, the chapters offer critical responses to the
issues of exclusion and exclusionary practices of 'silenced'
minorities in CEE. Written by academics based in Czech Republic,
Germany, Hungary Poland, Romania and Russia, the book cover topics
including Roma genocide in Poland, teaching about Islam and
teaching about LGBTQ+ issues. The book includes a preface written
by Jacqueline Bhabha, Professor of the Practice of Health and Human
Rights at Harvard University, USA.
Subjective human rights of children are reasonably fathomed
cooperatively by practice, activism and research. Approaches in
interdisciplinary learning and teaching in childhood and children's
rights are demonstrated as possibilities for social change through
acquiring competencies to think and act children's rights. This
book is dedicated to Manfred Liebel and focuses on his life's work.
He has, throughout his life and work, combined social scientific
childhood theories and children's rights discourses with practical,
topical examples of protagonism and agency of children and young
people in different national and international contexts.
|
|