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Showing 1 to 15 of 23 results Save | Export
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Rachel Brooks; Johanna Waters – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2025
The term 'Global Britain' was widely used by the UK government between 2016 and 2021 to signal its ambition to reorient the nation's foreign policy on departure from the European Union. There was, however, considerable uncertainty about what the term meant beyond this, with some commentators suggesting that it denoted a de-prioritising of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nationalism, Global Approach, Foreign Policy
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Sol Gamsu; Stephen Ashe; Jason Arday – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2024
Elite schools in the UK are bound to the history of British colonialism. This paper examines the material ties between these schools and the transatlantic slave trade. We combine multiple sources to examine which schools and their alumni accrued substantial economic capital derived from the enslavement of Black people. We find two principal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Schools, Slavery, World History
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John L. Hennessey – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2024
The politicization of history education relating to colonialism in former major colonial powers, like Britain and France, and former colonies has for obvious reasons received ample scholarly attention. But how is colonial history represented in educational materials aimed at primary school students in countries with a less evident connection to…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Teaching Methods, History Instruction, Foreign Countries
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Anna Lees; Ann Marie Ryan; Marissa Muñoz; Charles Tocci – Journal of Teacher Education, 2024
In this article, a team of teacher educators collectively think through the many possibilities of how concepts such as decolonization, abolition, and fugitivity intersect with and are taken up by teacher education programs. To do so, we undertook a critical interpretive synthesis of scholarly literature spanning 2000 to 2020 to locate, examine,…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Postcolonialism, Indigenous Knowledge, Decolonization
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David Rousell – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2024
This article develops the concept of "low-end phonographic pedagogies" through a life-long engagement with vinyl records and the Afro-diasporic music practices of reggae, dub, and dancehall. Approaching my record collection as a counter-archive of vibrational feeling and learning, I explore everyday practices of playing and listening to…
Descriptors: Audio Equipment, Afrocentrism, African Culture, Music Activities
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Scott-Brown, Sophie – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2022
The first British New Left formed in response to a crisis in international and British socialism. Although never a formal movement, its associated members set themselves the tasks of, first, confronting the rapid change transforming social life at both global and national scales, and second, articulating a new political culture able to accommodate…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Educational Philosophy, Foreign Countries, Social Systems
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Kaweesi, Edward Silvestre – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
This paper posits that the foundations of the teaching of political theory at Makerere University College obtain from British and American hegemony. The hegemonic tendencies are exemplified by the content of what was taught as political theory, the nature of the teaching staff in the Department of Political Science -- the country of origin, the…
Descriptors: Universities, Educational History, Teaching Methods, Political Science
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Cascant Sempere, Maria Josep; Aliyu, Talatu; Bollaert, Cathy – Education Sciences, 2022
Contemporary North-South research collaborations are fraught with power relations originating in colonialism. Debates about research ethics have tended to turn around the "procedural ethics" formal model and the "everyday ethics" practical model. We build on that to suggest a second debate that scrutinises ethics and power…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Research, Ethics, International Cooperation
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Parimala V. Rao – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
Thomas Munro, a Scottish highlander, came to the Madras Presidency in South India as a soldier in the army of the East India Company in 1780. He rose to the position of its governor 40 years later in 1820 and died in India in 1827. His rise was not through military campaigns but peaceful administrative policies. During his stay in India, he…
Descriptors: Indians, Colonialism, Military Personnel, Educational History
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Danvers, Emily – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
The Prevent counter terrorism strategy ('Prevent') -- specifically the duty to report those deemed vulnerable to, or causing suspicions of, radicalisation -- has been intensely criticised within UK higher education for its racialised and colonial agenda; its potential to curb academic freedom; and its reframing of the pedagogical dynamic as one of…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Terrorism, Educational Strategies, Prevention
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Aneta Hayes; Sylvie Lomer; Sophia Hayat Taha – Educational Review, 2024
This paper focuses on the epistemic inequality of international students as a "new" inequality that is under-represented in the current debates about decolonisation (albeit shaped by colonial discourses depicting international students as in deficit and incapable of meeting the standards of (colonial) universities). In this theoretical…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Equal Education, Foreign Students, Decolonization
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Gábor Szabó-Zsoldos – Hungarian Educational Research Journal, 2023
Toppling the statue of the slave merchant Edward Colston in Bristol, removing the monuments of King Leopold II from public places in Belgium, Black Lives Matter protests, and mass demonstrations targeting remembrance of certain chapters of the history of the Global North -- these are some of the significant events that drew attention to the…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Decolonization, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
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Preeti – History of Education, 2022
Agricultural improvement was a vital aspect of the 'development scheme' of the British Government in India as agriculture was the most revenue-generating industry in Bihar. From the first Famine Commission Report of 1880, there was a set agenda to improve agriculture through education. This was to be achieved through importing western science and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational History, Rural Areas, Power Structure
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Tamsin Hinton-Smith – Gender and Education, 2025
This paper explores perceptions of responsibility for including attention to gender and inequality in higher education curricula and pedagogic approaches internationally, through insights from Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) funded interdisciplinary research across India, Kazakhstan, Morocco, Nigeria and the United Kingdom. Perspectives…
Descriptors: Sex Fairness, Higher Education, Global Approach, Universities
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Lee, Jack T. – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2023
Recent calls for the decolonization of the academy demand recognition for diverse canons of knowledge. Asia's economic ascent also imparts rising confidence among Asian scholars and institutions to promote indigenous knowledge. While these global calls for emancipation are invigorating, decolonial scholarship is prone to sterile theorization,…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Indigenous Knowledge, Economic Development, Asians
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