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Showing all 14 results Save | Export
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Alexandra Lewis; Marie Lall – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
This article discusses how the critique of the monopoly of Western liberal thought through the decolonisation movement that was intended to increase the number of voices heard has been co-opted by nationalist politics in India and Russia. The debates in higher education in these countries reflect current key questions on the nature of the Indian…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Decolonization, Higher Education, Politics of Education
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Stanislaw E. Boridczenko – History of Education, 2024
This case study of the Russian Empire, based on the analysis of more than 100 primary sources in the form of textbooks on domestic history (uchebniki otechestvennoi istorii) and archival documentation, is intended to help understand the evolution of the formation of domestic history as a school subject as an integral part of the imperialist…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Textbooks, Postcolonialism, Authoritarianism
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Fumurescu, Ana – History of Education Quarterly, 2022
By the end of the nineteenth century, social hygiene was a topic of great importance for states experiencing fears of national degeneration. The health of children was of particular concern, as it was thought to reflect the future health of the nation. Although this prompted nation-states like France, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Child Health, Hygiene
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Kalinnikova Magnusson, Liya; Walton, Elizabeth – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2023
The pursuit of inclusive education in different countries is shaped by the extent and the nature of existing special educational provisions. We focus on two authoritarian regimes in the previous century: Soviet Russia (USSR) with its ideology of class (proletarian humanism and egalitarian universalism) and South Africa with its ideology of race…
Descriptors: Special Education, Educational History, Cross Cultural Studies, Historiography
Fazliev, Aivaz Minnegosmanovich; Shakurov, Farit Nailovich; Minnullin, Zavdat Salimovich; Nafikov, Ilsur Zakirzyanovich – Journal of Educational Psychology - Propositos y Representaciones, 2021
A special place belongs to the historical thought of the late 19th-early 20th centuries in the spiritual heritage of the Tatar people. In a short time, Tatar historians have achieved significant results in the reconstruction and study of the national past. Their successes were appreciated by Russian and European scholars and orientalists, and…
Descriptors: History, Intergroup Relations, Foreign Countries, Ethnic Groups
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Lisovskaya, Elena; Karpov, Vyacheslav – European Education, 2020
How and why did Russian education go from the enthusiastic liberalization in the early 1990s to the restoration of a Soviet-style system in the new century? Attempting to answer this question, the authors reassess and advance a theoretical model that they initially proposed fifteen years ago. While most research on education in transitional…
Descriptors: Universities, Educational History, Social Change, Social Systems
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Goca Memmedli, Gülnara – International Education Studies, 2021
When we talk about Meskhetian/Ahiskaian Turks, it is perceived that the Turkish community with a population of approximately 200 thousand existed in the Meskhetian/Samtskhe-Javakheti region of Georgia, who was exiled from their ancestral lands to the Central Asian countries in 1944 by the Soviet government. Due to its settled position, Ahiskaian…
Descriptors: Educational History, Authoritarianism, Ethnic Groups, Social Change
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Fallace, Thomas – Educational Researcher, 2018
This historical study explores how educators in the United States responded to the rise of fascism between the World Wars. By considering and then ultimately rejecting the fascist approach to education and philosophy, American educators defined democratic education in contrast to fascist/totalitarian approaches to education by rejecting…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Educational History, Democracy, Propaganda
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Oleksiyenko, Anatoly V. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
The legacy of totalitarianism thwarts discourse and practice of academic freedom in post-Soviet universities. For legacy-holders, "academic freedom" causes disorientation, irresponsibility, demoralization and inequity. They see more threats than benefits from empowering decision-makers who are non-compliant with local bureaucracy. For…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Universities, Decision Making, College Faculty
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Minina, Elena – Journal of Education Policy, 2017
Employing the analytical framework of a discourse-driven social change, this paper unpacks the neoliberal concept of "educational quality" in the course of Russian education modernisation reform from 1991 to 2013. Since the early 1990s, the global neoliberal discourse has served as the backbone for post-Soviet educational ideology.…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Quality Control, Foreign Countries, Social Change
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Kuraev, Alex – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2016
Historically, the university was an alien establishment for Russia, reflecting the political ambition of its leadership, not the organic impetus of Russian society. In Soviet academia, the notion of university education was replaced by the concept of vocational-technical training. As a creation of the Soviet government, Soviet higher education…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Administrative Organization, Higher Education, International Education
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Avci, Omer – Qualitative Report, 2012
This study focuses on the cultural characteristics of Ahiska Turks in Wheaton, Illinois in the United States. By trying to understand the culture of the participants, I sought to shed light on how the Ahiska Turks managed to cope with the hardship they experienced and yet preserved their ethnic identities. In this multicase study, I interviewed…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Semi Structured Interviews, Immigrants, Males
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deJong-Lambert, William – European Education, 2006
The history of international education is intimately connected to the competition between the United States and the Soviet Union during the second half of the twentieth century. Graduate programs established at colleges and universities in the United States were the outgrowth of a need to create cosmopolitan experts, capable of demonstrating the…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Universities, Social Systems, War
Robinson, Clyde C.; And Others – 1996
This study examined the psychometric characteristics of a 62-item parenting questionnaire completed by parents from the United States, Australia, China, and Russia. Factor analyses yielded three global parenting dimensions for each culture which were consistent with D. Baumrind's (1971) authoritative, authoritarian, and permissive typologies. The…
Descriptors: Authoritarianism, Child Development, Child Rearing, Classification