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Davies, Lynn – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2016
This article analyses how education is positioned in the current concerns about security and extremism. This means firstly examining the different meanings of security (national, human and societal) and who provides security for whom. Initially, a central dilemma is acknowledged: that schooling appears to be simultaneously irrelevant to the huge…
Descriptors: National Security, Terrorism, Prevention, Foreign Countries
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Sayed, Yusuf; Davies, Lynn; Hardy, Mike; Arani, Abbas Madandar; Kakia, Lida; Bano, Masooda – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2011
The above title was suggested by the editors of this journal as being an interesting topic for a forum. It is indeed a valuable one to explore, in that while there has been extensive writing on various connections between security, religion and education (e.g. Apple 2004; Griffin 2006; Merry 2007; Davies 2008), situating this within comparative…
Descriptors: Religion, National Security, Educational Development, Comparative Education
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Davies, Lynn – Intercultural Education, 2010
This paper examines the contribution of human rights education (HRE) to conflict prevention and to the promotion of security. It outlines the difficulties in evaluating the long-term impact of HRE, but then proposes five benefits of a rights-based approach to education--rights as secular, man-made, requiring transparency, enabling freedom from…
Descriptors: Prevention, Conflict, Childrens Rights, Politics
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Davies, Lynn – Compare: A Journal of Comparative Education, 2008
This paper examines the complex relationships between gender, education, extremism and security. After defining extremism and fundamentalism, it looks first at the relationship of gender to violence generally, before looking specifically at how this plays out in more extremist violence and terrorism. Religious fundamentalism is also shown to have…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Gender Differences, Security (Psychology), Political Attitudes