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Hunt, Stephen K.; Meyer, Kevin R. – Communication Education, 2021
America is deeply divided over issues like election fraud, COVID-19, and systematic racism. More concerning, Jenkins (2021) argues that the next few years could be marred by "death threats, attempted assassinations of political leaders, and other acts of terrorism" (para. 11). In addition, a U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS)…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Citizen Participation, Terrorism, Racial Discrimination
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Tracy Khan; Rebeca Perren; Nancy Quintanilla – Marketing Education Review, 2024
This research explores the impact of an innovative social media-based project on students' digital activism and their perspectives on societal issues, particularly domestic terrorism. A mixed methods approach, combining structural equation modeling and qualitative data, revealed that higher levels of ethnocultural empathy led to increased…
Descriptors: Activism, Social Action, Higher Education, Business Education
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Cheryl Lynn Duckworth – Journal of Peace Education, 2024
This study contributes to the literature via a qualitative meta-analysis that illuminates the role of schools in preventing and countering violent extremism and hate crimes globally. By examining and analyzing recent studies at the intersection of peace education and countering or preventing violent extremism (CVE/PVE), the present study develops…
Descriptors: School Role, Prevention, Violence, Terrorism
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Martin M. Sjøen – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2024
The issue of violent extremism has given rise to new policy debates in Norway. A key limitation of these debates, often grounded in naïve assumptions about the peacebuilding effect of education, is the downplay of emotions and dissent in democratic engagement. This article analyses how selected educators in Norway describe encountering and…
Descriptors: Violence, Terrorism, Antisocial Behavior, Teacher Attitudes
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Cristy Jones; Krystal L. Williams; Shellby Branch; Cate Crowe; Jaxon Miller; Will Richardson; Adriel A. Hilton – Peabody Journal of Education, 2024
Historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) were founded with the principal mission to educate Black people during an era when they were barred from most postsecondary opportunities. Today, these institutions play a vital role in the higher education landscape and help to insure the long-term viability of the U.S. economy. This research…
Descriptors: Black Colleges, African Americans, Racism, Violence
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Berman, Daniel; Stoddard, Jeremy – Journal of Educational Media, Memory and Society, 2022
In the aftermath of the 11 September 2001 attacks against the United States, people immediately compared the attack with the Japanese assault on Pearl Harbor sixty years prior. In this article, we explore how US and world history textbooks published shortly after Pearl Harbor and 9/11 depicted and contextualized both events. The textbooks…
Descriptors: Terrorism, Air Transportation, National Security, War
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Henshall, Cameron; Prosser, Howard; Sanjakdar, Fida – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2023
The role of schools in developing a sense of common British identity has taken centre stage in the face of 'racialised' accounts of violence during the twenty first century. In this paper, we argue that certain British education policy documents can be understood as "hegemonic interventions" seeking to resolve "ambiguities"…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Cultural Influences, Ambiguity (Context)
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Sjøen, Martin. M. – Journal of Peace Education, 2023
The prevention of violent extremism in education has given rise to considerable policy debates in Norway. A key feature of this, illustrated in the growing stream of curricular and security policy reforms, is that these debates risk being disconnected from graspable elements in the social lives of young people. Using qualitative document analysis…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Guided Pathways, Violence, Prevention
Tukhvatullin, Airat Halitovich; Epshteyn, Vitaly Anatolievich – Journal of Educational Psychology - Propositos y Representaciones, 2021
The relevance of the problem under study stems from the fact that the practice of terrorism is one of the main challenges of contemporary world politics, affecting various regions of our planet. In this regard, the study of this phenomenon within a particular region deserves special attention, Northern Ireland in this case. The practice of…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Terrorism, Foreign Countries, Violence
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Hussein Chaitani – International Journal of Adult Education and Technology, 2024
It could be argued that the current adult education paradigm aligns with a liberal knowledge economy. A more critical perspective is Paulo Freire's banking education concept that removes criticality from a learner's repertoire and facilitates alignment with the prevalent liberal education and its hegemonic objectives. Drawing from Paulo Freire's…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Critical Thinking, Terrorism, World Views
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Rodriguez, S. M. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
Sci-fi has the power to open dialogue because its alternate world-building enables students to feel far enough from reality to discuss social problems unreservedly. In this essay, I review an assignment I developed using "Black Mirror" and "Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams" that present episodes in which militarized policing,…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Violence, Police, Racial Segregation
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Zembylas, Michalinos – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2022
This paper analyses the emotional governance of responses to terrorist attacks and examines the extent to which affective pedagogies in civic education may contest the emotional norms that are institutionalised in society. This analysis is important, not only because it makes visible how forms of violence (especially terrorism) have an emotional…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Terrorism, Self Control, Emotional Response
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Langan, Elise; Goulding, Cathlin – Journal of International Social Studies, 2023
This article is a qualitative investigation of teachers' pedagogical approaches to the terror attacks on September 11, 2001. The ten participants are regionally diverse in-service teachers who attended workshops conducted by the 9/11 Memorial Museum and Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History in New York during June and July, 2019. Teachers…
Descriptors: Museums, Teaching Methods, Place Based Education, Social Studies
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Natalya Seitakhmetova; Essenzhol Aliyarov; Sholpan Zhandossova; Zhengisbek Tolen; Marhabbat Nurov – Journal of Social Studies Education Research, 2024
In the 21st century, the imperative to combat extremism and terrorism has risen to the forefront of global and regional agendas, becoming an indispensable condition for fostering the secure and prosperous development of states amidst the formation of a new strategic order. This study aims to examine the peculiarities of combating religious…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Islam, Religious Factors, Beliefs
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Patricia A. Somers; Suchitra V. Gururaj; Jess Geier; Curtis A. Brewer – Texas Education Review, 2024
According to the ACLU (2005), ". . .at times of national stress -- real or imagined -- First Amendment rights come under enormous pressure." So, too, academic freedom of expression for faculty, staff, and students has become a casualty in the post-9/11 world. Academics were criticized and reprimanded for not being patriotic enough. Using…
Descriptors: Patriotism, Censorship, College Faculty, Freedom of Speech
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