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Jairo I. Fúnez-Flores – Curriculum Journal, 2024
This essay reviews and builds upon Aníbal Quijano's contribution to decolonial theory to sketch out what I refer to as the geopolitics and coloniality of curriculum, broadly understood as an imperial doctrine and a pedagogical mode of domination aimed at producing a modern/colonial subjectivity. It argues that the geopolitics and coloniality of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Colonialism, Violence, Decolonization
Danielle L. DeFauw – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2025
Personally and professionally, the author shares experiences with school safety and how the English Language Arts (ELA) classroom may utilize middle grade novels to address gun violence with adolescents. Highlighting five middle grade novels that address school shootings--Katherine Erskine's (2011) "Mockingbird," Emily Barth Isler's…
Descriptors: School Violence, Weapons, Middle School Students, Novels
Maiju Paananen; Susan Grieshaber – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2025
This paper examines inequality among children, demonstrating its gradual emergence within the folds of daily routines in early childhood education (ECE). Employing Rob Nixon's (2011) concept of slow violence, our focus is on the cumulative impact of practices involving exclusion. Synthesizing Nixon's framework with Deleuze (1994) and Guattari's…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Equal Education, Social Isolation, Violence
Nezha El Massoudi – Prospects, 2024
Trust in the potential of education as a common good is the cornerstone of the bond between citizens and their institutions. Changing current patterns entails lifting barriers to a culture of peace and uprooting all forms of violence. Education needs to be resilient enough through its citizen education to provide a framework for thriving…
Descriptors: Peace, Citizenship Education, Violence, Governance
Breanna J. Nickel – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2024
The article acknowledges the limits of the categories of similarity and difference in undergraduate comparative religion courses. To challenge these limitations, including the potential for dualistic or "us/them" thinking, several pedagogical attempts to increase relationality in Christian-Muslim courses are explored. Relational methods…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Religion Studies, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies
Emma Soye – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2024
Knife crime in the UK is on the increase, prompting an emphasis in education policy on the role of secondary schools in addressing gang violence. Very little is known, however, about how teachers in secondary schools experience this new role. This article helps to fill this gap in the literature by foregrounding teachers' perspectives on gang…
Descriptors: Crime, Violence, Juvenile Gangs, Foreign Countries
Martin M. Sjøen – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
The issue of violent extremism has given rise to new policy debates in Norway. A key limitation of these debates, often grounded in naïve assumptions about the peacebuilding effect of education, is the downplay of emotions and dissent in democratic engagement. This article analyses how selected educators in Norway describe encountering and…
Descriptors: Violence, Terrorism, Antisocial Behavior, Teacher Attitudes
Basma Hajir – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2024
This article extends current debates in Education for Peacebuilding (EfP) in conflict settings. It presents and discusses two paradoxes I have observed when examining EfP literature and engaging in conversations with EfP scholars: 'the paradox of liberalism' and 'the paradox of decoloniality'. I unpack these two paradoxes by engaging in conceptual…
Descriptors: Peace, Political Attitudes, Correlation, Decolonization
Shushan Vardanyan – Critical Questions in Education, 2025
This case study explores a seven-year-old child's fears of gun violence expressed through drawings and writings during two literacy lessons in a public American school. The child's artwork and writing revealed a profound fear of attending school due to the possibility of being killed. This study raises critical questions: Should children's…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, School Violence, School Security, Weapons
Ferenc Arató; Barbara Anita Bodnár – Intercultural Education, 2024
The aim of this study is to analyse the 'Teaching Students to be Peacemakers' programme, which is frequently cited in the Peace Education discourse, within the context of Peace Education. Based on a systematic literature review conducted using the PRISMA method, the study focuses on this programme that emerged as significant from the review…
Descriptors: Peace, Teaching Methods, Cooperative Learning, Program Descriptions
Luisa Ramírez; Angela Victoria Vera-Márquez; Ximena Palacios-Espinosa; Cristian Yesid Urbano Mejía; Laura Rojas-Gaitán – Journal of Peace Education, 2024
Colombian society has been exposed to decades of sociopolitical violence with apparent effects on its social infrastructure that may inadvertently lead to more structural, cultural, and interpersonal forms of violence. Peacebuilding efforts are required, and education for peace plays a key role. This requires building conflict sensitivity within…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Peace, Electronic Learning, Educational Technology
Soo Bin Jang – Active Learning in Higher Education, 2024
I discuss White American students' experiences of reading racism-themed young adult literature (YAL), addressing the issue of police brutality, and using the concept of intersectionality to promote social justice awareness. Based on analysis of their written reflections and classroom discussions, I argue reading racism-themed YAL with an…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Power Structure, Racism, Adolescent Literature
In Their Own Words: Teaching Empathy through the Centering of Individuals Who Have Experienced Abuse
Shelly Clevenger; Jordana N. Navarro – Teaching Sociology, 2025
This article provides an overview of the Survivors: Local Stories of Domestic Violence (hereafter, Survivors) civic engagement project. Survivors' learning objectives were to increase the understanding of the complexity of intimate partner abuse and foster empathy in outsiders' responses, something at the cornerstone of the #MeToo social movement…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Empathy, Family Violence, Citizen Participation
Vachararutai Boontinand; Joshua Forstenzer – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
In a climate of growing intolerance and violence, marked by various forms of injustice across the democratic world, human rights and democratic citizenship education have the potential to help cultivate knowledge, values and skills or competences in the young that are necessary to foster a culture of human rights and democracy. However, education…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Civil Rights, Social Attitudes, Democracy
Wairimu Ngaruiya Njambi; William Eugene O'Brien – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2024
In spring 2021, we taught a course called Honors White Supremacy and Privilege to university honors students at our higher education institution in Florida. Aimed at helping students process intellectually the Black Lives Matter events of the preceding year, the course took place just as a reaction was gathering momentum against anti-racist…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Violence, Political Attitudes, Whites