In most countries, whether secular or otherwise, education and religion are closely interlinked and no matter how hard the state tries, it can be very difficult to remove the ties between them. This book investigates the links between education, religion and politics.
The dominant feature in creating a common culture between peoples, each of which has its own distinct heritage and practices, is religion. Globalisation is leading to a redefinition of the state, community and local identity, this latter often perceived as resistance against the forces of unity, whether through culture, economic activity or language. Recent world events have focused attention on the interplay between education, religion and politics like never before. Even more pertinent is the fact that the involvement of politics in decisions about religion and education is often central and impossible to disentangle.
Education and Religion covers all the major religious traditions – Buddhist, Christian, Jewish, Hindu, Muslim, Sikh – and cites global examples throughout the world. It aims to understand the underlying complexities in the struggle to reconcile education, religion and politics in an informative and sensitive way.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Comparative Education.
In most countries, whether secular or otherwise, education and religion are closely interlinked and no matter how hard the state tries, it can be very difficult to remove the ties between them. This book investigates the links between education, religion and politics.
Education and Religion covers all the major religious traditions – Buddh
1. Education, religion and politics: can they ever be disentangled?
Keith Watson and William I. Ozanne
2. Education for All: where does religion
come in? Katherine Marshall
3. Spatial dimensions of Christianity and
education in Western European history, with legacies for the present Colin
Brock
4. Contrasting policies towards (mainly) Christian education in
different contexts Keith Watson
5. The state approach to Jewish and
non-Jewish education in Israel Yaacov Katz
6. Religious identity and
governmental education policies: the case of the Sikh community William I.
Ozanne
7. Religion, education and the politics of recognition: a critique and
a counter-proposal Sangeeta Kama and Biju Mathew
8. Globalisation, Political
Islam and the headscarf in education, with special reference to the Turkish
educational system Ismail Guven
9. The legacy of Christianity in West
Africa, with special reference to Burkina Faso Philippe Ouedraogo
Keith Watson is Emeritus Professor in Education, Management and Training at the Centre for International Studies, University of Reading, UK. He is author of Education in the Third World (2010) and co-author of Comparative and International Research in Education: Globalisation, Context and Differences (2003).
William I. Ozanne is Adviser to the Archbishop of Birmingham on inter-faith relations , Secretary of the Archdiocesan Commission for Interreligious Dialogue, and visiting lecturer in Inter-Faith Studies at St. Mary's College Oscott, UK. He is founder and an executive editor of the International Journal of Educational Development.