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Sjøen, Martin M.; Mattsson, Christer – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2023
Over the past decades, emerging focus has been on how teachers in Norway can foster citizenship in their classrooms to strengthen democracy. Yet, in conjunction with rising concerns of homegrown terrorism, a new curriculum in Norway draws on democratic education as a bulwark against terrorism. This paper explores the securitisation of the…
Descriptors: Prevention, Terrorism, National Security, Teaching Methods
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Barnard, Mathew – English in Education, 2023
This paper theoretically demonstrates the potential of textual space in making an important contribution to school ethos and cultural pedagogy. It demonstrates how culturally-inclusive (representational) textual space can be expanded throughout the school and could contribute to social justice and decolonisation efforts beyond the English…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, English Literature, Educational Policy, Neoliberalism
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Healy, Mary – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2019
Many of the often complex debates central to the topics of belonging and social cohesion have their origins in contrasting interpretations of the ideal relationship between citizens. Governments across much of the western world continue to struggle to reconceptualise what it is to 'belong together' at a time of growing diversity and migration.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Values, Educational Practices, Social Integration
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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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Winter, Christine; Mills, China – Journal of Education Policy, 2020
Framed as being in response to terrorist attacks and concerns about religious bias in some English schools, 'British Values' (BV) curriculum policy forms part of the British Government's Counter-Terrorism and Security Act, 2015. This includes a Duty on teachers in England to actively promote British Values to deter students from radicalisation.…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Social Values, Foreign Countries, Terrorism
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Jerome, Lee; Elwick, Alex – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2019
School responses to the Prevent agenda have tended to focus primarily on 'safeguarding' approaches, which essentially perceive some young people as being 'at risk' and potentially as presenting a risk to others. In this article, we consider evidence from secondary school students who experienced a curriculum project on terrorism, extremism and…
Descriptors: Terrorism, National Security, Antisocial Behavior, At Risk Persons
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Wolton, Suke – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2017
The duty to monitor "the failure to uphold British Values" in the "Prevent" strategy, introduced in the Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015, is itself an attack on British democracy. This article explains the contradictory nature of the "Prevent Duty." First, the current state of democracy in Britain is examined…
Descriptors: Social Values, Democracy, Prevention, Terrorism
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Anderson, Babs – Ethics and Education, 2020
This contribution examines the implementation of the 'British' values agenda within Early Childhood Care and Education (ECEC) settings in England, as introduced by the Prevent Duty. It begins by tracing the rise of the ECEC setting as the primary place of education of the young child, as this has shifted from the home environment. It examines the…
Descriptors: Social Values, National Security, Values Education, Early Childhood Education
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O'Donnell, Aislinn – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2017
This article addresses the way in which the securitisation of education, effected through initiatives in counter-terrorism such as Prevent, leads to what I call "pedagogical injustice" for students and teachers. It analyses the implications of the pre-crime agenda in the space of the classroom and draws upon literature on epistemic…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Public Policy, Federal Legislation, Terrorism
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O'Donnell, Aislinn – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2016
This paper outlines some of the implications of counterterrorist legislation, including Prevent, for the pedagogical relationship and for educational institutions. The concept of "radicalisation", central to the Prevent Strategy, is one that is contested in the field of counterterrorism, yet educators are now expected to identify and…
Descriptors: National Security, Terrorism, Ethics, Antisocial Behavior
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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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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