Citizenship Education and Its Contradictions
- Author
- Franรงois Audigier
- Corporate Author
- Revue internationale dโรฉducation de Sรจvres
- ISBN
- ISSN 1254-4590
- Collation
- p. 25-34
- Resource Language
- French
- Year of publication
- 2007
- Resource Type
- International normative instruments / policy and advocacy documentsResearch papers / journal articles
- Level of education
- Higher education
- Region
- Europe and North America
- Place of publication
- Paris
From design to implementation, citizenship education is fraught with tensions and contradictions. The concept of citizenship itself brings into play political, affective and legal aspects. Delivering citizenship education in schools raises several issues. At times treated as a subject area in its own right and at times taught using cross-disciplinary approaches, citizenship education addresses not only knowledge and skills, but also values and behaviour. The ends of citizenship education are ambitious, and often include aims that are difficult to reconcile with one another. In terms of how citizenship education is actually delivered, the once-systematic introduction to the legal and political systems has lost ground to the more recent priority of teaching students a sense of community.

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
IIEP-UNESCO 12th Medium-Term Strategy: 2026โ2029
More than Welcome: Intercultural Integration of Migrants in and Through Higher Education
Advancing Intergenerational Learning: Identifying Challenges and Opportunities for Older Adults; Integrated Case Study Report