Securitising Education to Prevent Terrorism or Losing Direction?
- Author
- Bill Durodie
- Corporate Author
- Society for Educational StudiesTaylor & Francis
- Collation
- 14p
- Resource Language
- English
- Year of publication
- 2016
- Resource Type
- Research papers / journal articlesOther
- Level of education
- Higher educationOthers
- Region
- Europe and North America
- Place of publication
- London; New York
This article examines the growing relationship between security and education, particularly in the light of the UK governmentโs Prevent Duty that seeks to tackle radicalization in a variety of milieus, including universities. However, rather than seeing this process as being merely one-way, through a so-called securitization of education, what is explored here is the dialectic between these two spheres. It is suggested that a heightened sensitivity to the supposed consequences of inflammatory rhetoric on the well-being of supposedly suggestible or vulnerable students has been in existence within education for quite some time.

Addressing Violent Pasts Through Education: A Policy Guide
Where Learners Meet History: Reaffirming the Role of History Education in the 21st Century
Study on the Historical Impact of the 1974 Recommendation concerning Education for International Understanding, Cooperation and Peace and Education relating to Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms