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Bryan, Audrey – International Journal of Development Education and Global Learning, 2013
This paper draws on the Republic of Ireland as a case study of the 'new' development advocacy, i.e. government, philanthropic, and celebrity humanitarian engagement with international development and statutory efforts to deepen understanding of international development among citizens in the global North (Biccum, 2010; 2011). It outlines some of…
Descriptors: Advocacy, International Programs, International Studies, Global Education
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Jordan, Thomas E. – Social Indicators Research, 2009
The purpose of the essay is to demonstrate that study of quality of life can explore eras before our own. There are caches of social data as early as the seventeenth century, and there were people who attempted to formulate social circumstances close to today's concepts of quality of life. Data from England and Ireland are presented and analyzed.
Descriptors: Quality of Life, Foreign Countries, Data, Sociometric Techniques
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Bracey, Paul – History of Education, 2006
This paper asserts that an Irish dimension within the English History curriculum since c.1970 reflects approaches towards diversity. An Irish dimension is explored within the context of Multicultural Britain, debates over ways in which the past has been constructed and changes in the history curriculum. It is argued that that there is a…
Descriptors: History Instruction, European History, Minority Groups, Multicultural Education
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Bracey, Paul; Gove-Humphries, Alison; Jackson, Darius – Education 3-13, 2006
This article explores the use of historical fiction as a means of undertaking a historical enquiry into the experiences of refugees and evacuees with Key Stage 2 and 3 pupils. The authors reflect on the reasons why people have come to Britain before focussing on specific circumstances associated with World War 2. This is undertaken through the use…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Historical Interpretation, War, Foreign Countries
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Cowell, David A. – Social Science Docket, 2002
Focuses on the myth centered around the great hunger in Ireland, explaining aspects of this myth. Explains that the great hunger was actually a series of events and that the Irish were involved in the British policies that affected Ireland at the time. (CMK)
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Foreign Countries, Government Role, Historical Interpretation
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McCully, Alan; Pilgrim, Nigel – Teaching History, 2004
Helping students to understand how and why people in the present interpret the past differently is a challenge. It is also vital if we are to develop an understanding of why the meanings we ascribe to the past are not fixed, but rather are subject to our own prejudices or goals. A number of articles in previous editions have explored how students…
Descriptors: Historical Interpretation, Intellectual History, Fiction, Didacticism
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Glassie, Henry – Journal of American History, 1994
Discusses the role of historians from an anthropological perspective. Maintains that there are "double histories": a political, official history and a history focusing on place and society. Asserts that history's virtues make it both important and impossible. (CFR)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Cultural Interrelationships, Cultural Pluralism, Folk Culture