Schools and war: urgent agendas for comparative and international education
- Autor
- Lynn Davies
- Autor Corporativo
- Taylor & Francis
- Colección
- 15p
- Idioma del recurso
- inglés
- Año de publicación
- 2005
- Tema
- Civiles / Ciudadanía / DemocraciaGlobalización y justicia social / Comprensión internacionalPrevención de extremismo violento y genocidio
- Tipo de Recurso
- Research papers / journal articles
- Nivel de Educación
- Educación superiorEducación permanenteEducación no formalOtros
- Región
- Global
- Lugar de publicación
- London; New York
This paper looks first at the contributions that education makes to conflict, through the reproduction of inequality and exclusion, through perpetuation of ethnic or religious divisions, through its acceptance of dominant aggressive masculinities, through selection, competition and fear, and through distorted curricular emphases on narrow cognitive areas of learning. However, the paper also outlines some ‘possibilities for hope’, such as resilient schools, the impact of peace education initiatives and the rise of global citizenship education.

Confronting Inequality through GCED: Toward Justice, Inclusion, and Transformation (SangSaeng; No.65, 2025)
Educator's Guide to Global Citizenship Education from Asia-Pacific Perspectives
Supporting Change in Practice: Case Studies on the Use of the ACER-APCEIU Global Citizenship Education Monitoring Toolkit; Country Case-Australia
Supporting Change in Practice: Case Studies on the Use of the ACER-APCEIU Global Citizenship Education Monitoring Toolkit: Country Case-Republic of Korea