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Showing 1 to 15 of 27 results Save | Export
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Ben-Porath, Sigal – Educational Theory, 2023
Democracies are calling on schools to respond to a rise in extremist ideologies and actions. In this article Sigal Ben-Porath situates the rise in extremism within the broader context of political polarization. She suggests that the latter is a more appropriate target for school intervention than the former. She further suggests that addressing…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Prevention, Terrorism, Antisocial Behavior
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Lumb, Eve – FORUM: for promoting 3-19 comprehensive education, 2018
This article explores some of the implications of the British Values discourse within early years education and the consequences of the Prevent duty requirements. It highlights some of the ethical dilemmas imposed as a result of the potential securitisation of early years education, and also explores the very ethos of British Values within early…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Prevention, Terrorism, Early Childhood Education
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Sjøen, Martin M. – Journal of Peace Education, 2021
What is at stake when educators are asked to deploy vigilant surveillance against students considered to be at risk of becoming a terrorist? This article explores the growing relationship between education and terrorism by focusing on how schools can contribute to reducing fears of terrorism. Rather than profiling future terrorists among their…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Role of Education, School Role, Prevention
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Mohammadi, Mohammad – Shanlax International Journal of Education, 2021
Education as a pervasive process has affected all aspects of individual and group life, and today, almost all those seeking development and reform start from all over the world. Preventing radicalization and violent extremism is one of the most controversial issues in the world in this century. In addition, it was found that some extremist groups…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Role of Education, Violence, Prevention
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O'Donnell, Aislinn – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2018
The article addresses the implications of Prevent and Channel for epistemic justice. The first section outlines the background of Prevent. It draws upon Moira Gatens and Genevieve Lloyd's concept of the collective imaginary, alongside Lorraine Code's concept of epistemologies of mastery, in order to outline some of the images and imaginaries that…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Disadvantaged, Terrorism, Epistemology
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Hill, Ryan – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2019
The UK Government's PREVENT strategy to counter radicalisation and extremism has been the subject of criticism. Concerns arise over clarity of purpose, clarity of terminology used and potential human rights impacts. Where the policy engages with schools, one human right potentially engaged is the right of parents to transfer their religious…
Descriptors: Prevention, Foreign Countries, Criticism, Antisocial Behavior
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Meehan, Catherine; Meehan, Patrick – Early Child Development and Care, 2019
By the time children are 8 years of age, their attitudes, values, identities and beliefs are shaped and becoming solidly formed. Early childhood educators are uniquely positioned in children's lives to promote positive values and beliefs and to foster authentic appreciation of difference. This important work is challenged by a discourse in wider…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Spiritual Development, Early Childhood Education, Social Attitudes
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Shirazi, Roozbeh – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2017
The intent of this series is to generate a space for critical reflection and inquiry on a burgeoning form of sociopolitical labor of schooling, that of educating against "extremism." In the United States' ongoing "War on Terror" being waged across the Middle East, North and East Africa, and South Asia, formal and informal…
Descriptors: National Security, Citizenship, Terrorism, Antisocial Behavior
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Dear, Lou – International Education Journal: Comparative Perspectives, 2018
This article will chart the history of the university in Britain as a site of border control. It will then describe the future of the university via narrative and dystopian sci-fi. Before numerous independence declarations, the borders of Britain's Empire were vast and fluid. The British Nationality Act of 1948 afforded hundreds of millions of…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Student Recruitment, Foreign Countries, Educational History
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Palfreyman, David – Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, 2015
This article explores the new Legislative Act concerned with the "Risk of Being Drawn into Terrorism" and the need for "Preventing People Being Drawn into Terrorism." It provides consultation and guidance to specified authorities such as universities on how they should go about implementing this "Prevent" duty. The…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Emergency Programs, Crisis Management, College Programs
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Nickerson, Raymond S. – American Psychologist, 2011
Human factors and ergonomics research focuses on questions pertaining to the design of devices, systems, and procedures with the goal of making sure that they are well suited to human use and focuses on studies of the interaction of people with simple and complex systems and machines. Problem areas studied include the allocation of function to…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Human Factors Engineering, National Security, Prevention
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Bartlett, Alice – Research in Drama Education, 2011
This paper draws on my own recent experience of local artistic engagement with the British government's counter-terrorism strategy, Prevent(ing Violent Extremism). "Not in My Name" uses verbatim theatre techniques to negotiate dialogue within and across communities around a controversial agenda, and has received national acclaim for its…
Descriptors: Drama, Terrorism, Audiences, Artists
Shah, Nirvi – Education Week, 2011
Since 9/11, the lives of some Muslim students, and those perceived to be Muslim, have changed across the country, shaped in part by the distrust and harassment Muslims have endured from fellow Americans. In the months immediately following the attacks, accounts of harassment of Muslim students mounted in the news media, as did efforts by Muslim…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Muslims, Federal Government, News Media
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Jacobs, Sue C.; Leach, Mark M.; Gerstein, Lawrence H. – Counseling Psychologist, 2011
Counseling psychologists have responded to many disasters, including the Haiti earthquake, the 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States, and Hurricane Katrina. However, as a profession, their responses have been localized and nonsystematic. In this first of four articles in this contribution, "Counseling Psychology and Large-Scale Disasters,…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Terrorism, Psychologists, Counseling Psychology
Kuehner, Trudy – Foreign Policy Research Institute, 2009
On March 28-29, 2009, FPRI's Wachman Center hosted 43 teachers from across the country for a weekend of discussion on teaching the nuclear age. In his opening remarks, Walter A. McDougall observed that although students today are not made to crawl under their desks in air raid drills, that atomic power remains, and it is still necessary to raise a…
Descriptors: Weapons, War, International Relations, World History
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