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E-raamat: Education and Extremisms: Rethinking Liberal Pedagogies in the Contemporary World

Edited by (Institute of Ismaili Studies, UK), Edited by (University College London, UK), Edited by (University of Birmingham, UK), Edited by (Canterbury Christ Church University, UK)
  • Formaat: 276 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Aug-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781315303093
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  • Formaat: 276 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Aug-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781315303093

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Education and Extremisms addresses one of the most pressing questions facing societies today: how is education to respond to the challenge of extremism? It argues that the implementation of new teaching techniques, curricular reforms or top-down changes to education policy alone cannot solve the problem of extremism in educational establishments across the world. Instead, the authors of this thought-provoking volume argue that there is a need for those concerned with radicalisation to reconsider the relationship between instrumentalist ideologies shaping education and the multiple forms of extremisms that exist.

Beginning with a detailed discussion of the complicated and contested nature of different forms of extremism, including extremism of both a religious and secular nature, the authors show that common assumptions in contemporary discourses on education and extremism are problematic. Chapters in the book provide a careful selection of pertinent and topical case studies, policy analysis and insightful critique of extremist discourses. Taken together, the chapters in the book make a powerful case for re-engaging with liberal education in order to foster values of individual and social enrichment, intellectual freedom, criticality, open-mindedness, flexibility and reflection as antidotes to extremist ideologies. Recognising recent criticisms of liberalism and liberal education, the authors argue for a new understanding of liberal education that is suitable for multicultural societies in a rapidly globalising world.

This book is essential reading for academics, researchers and postgraduate students with an interest in religion, citizenship education, liberalism, secularism, counter-terrorism, social policy, Muslim education, youth studies and extremism. It is also relevant to teacher educators, teachers and policymakers.

Arvustused

"This book brings clarity and criticality to a complex and vitally important question: how can education prepare educators, school children and university students to live as revitalised active citizens? A strong team of thinkers and practitioners contextualise their proposals for action within a national and international framework. They challenge existing state ideologies and insist upon the capacities of education to teach us how to understand that pervasive truths may be provisional, that good education explains but may not resolve dissonant views and that tolerance must be active and critical. I recommend this book very warmly for its conceptual analyses and practical solutions to the labour of being critical, liberal and democratic."

Alison Scott-Baumann, Centre of Islamic Studies SOAS

Foreword viii
Acknowledgements x
List of contributors
xi
Introduction 1(14)
Farid Panjwani
Lynn Revell
Reza Gholami
Mike Diboll
PART 1 State policies and educational practices
15(74)
1 Challenging extremism and promoting cohesion: national policies and local implementation
17(14)
Joyce Miller
2 Education, freedom of belief and countering terrorism: the minefield between UK policy and school implementation
31(14)
Angela Quartermaine
3 Education and disengagement: extremism and the perception of Muslim students
45(15)
Tania Saeed
4 Street children, integrated education and violence in northern Nigeria
60(14)
Chidi Ezegwu
Adewole O. Adedokun
Chioma Ezegwu
5 Misplaced Utopia: education and extremism -- the case of Pakistan
74(15)
Farid Panjwani
Zulfiqar Khimani
PART 2 Perspectives on extremism
89(86)
6 Challenging the legitimacy of extremism: critique through education in the work of Khaled Abou El Fadl
91(14)
Angus M. Slater
7 Teaching early Muslim history: facilitating criticality through a source-based approach
105(13)
Philip Wood
8 `Mine own familiar friend ...' education and extremism, within historic culture
118(11)
John A. White
9 Gender equality in education, context and criticality: student teacher engagements in three northern Nigerian states
129(17)
Elaine Unterhalter
Chidi Ezegwu
Adewole O. Adedokun
Mulika Lamido Dodo
Wadata Dangaladim
10 The balanced nation: addressing the challenges of Islamist and far-right extremism in the classroom
146(14)
Justin Crawford
Julia Ebner
Usama Hasan
11 Multiple ontologies of extremism: ISISes in education, a case study
160(15)
Mike Diboll
PART 3 Reconceptualising liberal education and criticality
175(70)
12 Negotiating difference in education: extremism, political agency and an ethics of care
177(14)
Sarah V. Marsden
13 Resilience and soft power: an analysis of UK government and international guidelines and resources to address radicalisation and extremism in education
191(13)
Lynn Revell
14 Tolerance, its moral ambiguity and civic value for schools
204(13)
Robert A. Bowie
15 Nurturing critical thinking across self-other dichotomies
217(13)
Daryoush Mohammad Poor
16 Cosmopolitanism as transformative experience: towards a new social ethic
230(15)
Reza Gholami
Epilogue 245(8)
Mike Diboll
Lynn Revell
Reza Gholami
Farid Panjwani
Index 253
Farid Panjwani is a Senior Lecturer and founding Director at the Centre for Research and Evaluation in Muslim Education (CREME) at the UCL Institute of Education, University College London, UK.

Lynn Revell is Reader in Religion and Education at Canterbury Christ Church University, UK.

Reza Gholami is Lecturer in Sociology of Education in the School of Social Science and Public Policy at Keele University, UK.

Mike Diboll is Honorary Research Associate at UCL Institute of Education, University College London, UK.