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Resilience, violent extremism and religious education Année de publication: 2013 Auteur: Joyce Miller This article is an attempt to provide an educational justification for the British Government-funded project REsilience, on addressing contentious issues through religious education (RE), which was carried out by the RE Council of England and Wales. A number of issues relating to the inclusion of religiously inspired violent extremism in the curriculum are raised – definitional, political and educational. Rapport relatif à l'enquête sur la mise en oeuvre de la Feuille de route pour l'éducation artistique Année de publication: 2010 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO The Road Map for Arts Education is a reference document that aims to explore the role of arts education in meeting the need for creativity and cultural awareness in the 21st Century, while placing emphasis on the strategies required to introduce or promote arts education in the learning environment. Within this conceptual framework, all UNESCO Member States interested in initiating or developing arts education practices can mould their own national policy guidelines, adapted to their socio-cultural specificities. With the Road Map, UNESCO advocates the essential role of arts education within societies, to create a common ground of understanding for all stakeholders. The development of the Road Map for Arts Education was a lengthy and comprehensive consultation process. The document was first elaborated by a group of experts and UNESCO, then presented at the First World Conference on Arts Education (Lisbon, 2006) and later revised and updated, following recommendations from NGOs and Member States. The Road Map was finally distributed to the UNESCO Member States in November 2007 in English and French and then translated into Spanish and Russian following popular demand. More than a year after this distribution, UNESCO launched a wide-ranging survey in order to assess the implementation of the Road Map in its 193 Member States. Through its National Commissions, the Organization relayed this document to Ministries of both Education and Culture. The aim of this exercise was threefold: to learn whether the Road Map was being applied and to what extent it was influencing policy decisions at national level; to act as a reminder of the importance of the UNESCO reference document and encourage its use; finally, to assess the situation of arts education in the responding countries. Thus, this survey not only acted as a catalyst for the implementation of the Road Map, but also provided precious knowledge on arts education around the world. The Member States’ responses also contributed greatly to the Second World Conference on Arts Education (Seoul, May 2010), inspiring one of its main themes and the topics for a number of workshops. They also encouraged a more integral participation of these States in the conference through preparatory consultations. Welcome to the Anthropocene! (The UNESCO Courier no. 2, April-June 2018) Année de publication: 2018 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO In the Ideas section of this issue, three internationally celebrated academics consider the notion of diversity –  Mireille Delmas-Marty, a member of the Institut de France; Souleymane Bachir Diagne, Senegalese philosopher; and Abdourahman Waberi, novelist and diarist from Djibouti. With these articles, the Courier marks the celebrations of the World Day for Cultural Diversity for Dialogue and Development (21 May) and the International Day for Biological Diversity (22 May).Our Guest for this issue is Bibi Russell, a fashion designer from Bangladesh. A former  top model in London, she quit the catwalk to devote herself to using fashion for development. She is currently working in India, helping young women, some of whom were trafficked as children, to find their bearings and start a new life.To mark UNESCO’s Africa Week in May, we focus on youth in the West and the South of the continent, in our Current Affairs section. After visiting  Athens, World Book Capital 2018, we travel  to Canada’s Northwest territories, on the other side of the world, to discover the people of Great Bear Lake, in the Tsá Tué biosphere reserve – established and looked after by the indigenous community that lives there.Finally, Zoom invites us to follow an ordinary day in the life of Qello, a 13-year old girl in Ethiopia, hour by hour.The UNESCO Courier celebrates its 70th birthday in 2018. Each issue this year will feature an article that looks back at this extraordinary adventure. In this issue, Roberto Markarian, Rector of the University of the Republic, Uruguay, recounts the story of the role the Courier has played in his life. Bienvenue dans l'Anthropocène! (Le Courrier de l'UNESCO no. 2; Avril-Juin 2018) Année de publication: 2018 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO Selon les uns, l’Anthropocène n’est qu’un autre nom pour l’époque que nous appelons Holocène, les humains ayant commencé à exercer une pression sur l’environnement depuis 10 000ans, c’est-à-dire depuis leur sédentarisation et l’invention de l’agriculture. Selon d’autres, l’Anthropocène commencerait autour de 1800, avec la révolution industrielle. D’autres encore voient l’Anthropocène éclore dupremier champignon atomique de 1945. Malgré ces divergences, très rares sont ceux qui ne reconnaissent pas qu’au cours du dernier demi-siècle l’état de la planète s’est dégradé plus rapidement et plus dramatiquement que jamais : amasgigantesques de plastique sur les plages et dans les mers, développement sans précédent de nouveaux matériaux qui couvrent la surface terrestre et ne se recyclent que très peu, sols gorgés d’engrais, augmentation du taux d’acidité des mers, tauxde pollution sans précédent, érosion des forêts tropicales, dérèglement desécosystèmes, extinction massive des espèces et diminution drastique de la biodiversité, réchauffement climatique...À qui la faute ? Auxhumains – répond lamajorité des scientifiques. Reste à savoir si nous devrions tous porter la même charge deresponsabilité. Certains blâmant avant tout le système capitaliste né en Occident, parlent de Capitalocène ou d’Occidentalocène. Courons-nous à la catastrophe? Des voix s’élèvent pour prophétiser la fin du monde! Des notions comme Chtulhucène ou Thanatocène sont avancées pour signifier que le monstre rôde, quela mort nous guette... Des experts, bien plus modérés, n’en sont pas moins inquiets face à l’indécision des décideurs. «Tout se passe comme si l’humanité, léthargique, attendait la fin du film et le moment où les héros viendront tout arranger et où nous serons tous heureux pour toujours», lira-t-on dans ces pages.Le débat fait rage, les solutions tardent à venir. Le Courrier fait le point.  Lessons Learned for Peace Année de publication: 2019 This resource is part of a collection of resources compiled by UNICEF’s 2012-2016 Peacebuilding, Education and Advocacy Programme (PBEA), known as Learning for Peace, which was funded by the Government of the Netherlands. The purpose of Lessons Learned for Peace is to share UNICEF’s experience in conducting conflict analyses as a prerequisite for social services programming in fragile and conflict-affected contexts. As part of UNICEF’s Peacebuilding, Education and Advocacy programme, supported by the Government of the Netherlands from 2012-2016, UNICEF commissioned conflict analyses in 14 countries that informed education and other social services interventions at the system, institutional, community and individual levels. The challenges, opportunities and lessons-learned of conflict analysis research in fragile and post-conflict contexts are illustrated and discussed. EIU Best Practices Series No. 49: GCED for Social Justice and Development; A Case from Uganda Année de publication: 2018 Auteur institutionnel: APCEIU Creating a peaceful, trusting and supportive learning environment is a strong driver for a nation’s sustainable development. Any society whose citizens have no cognitive, socio-emotional and behavioral values like respect for self and humanity, is doomed for chaos. The concepts of Education for International Understanding(EIU) and Global Citizenship Education(GCED) in this programme emerge from the need for harmonious living in the society. Sustainable human and economic development is built upon the successful dissemination and implementation of EIU/GCED practices. To understand this better, let’s use the analogy of a bird that gains its momentum to fly from its feet, lungs and wings.The contributor uses this analogy to illustrate that EIU/GCED is the foundation that exerts momentum for social development.The contributor saw it necessary that for any sustainable development to flourish in Ugandan society, pragmatic values have to be perfectly blended with public awareness for they serve as the foundation of all economic, social, cultural and political efforts. The national value system should be based on a strong foundation on which all national efforts are rooted. The social aspirations of the citizens should be the ones that propel development needs and national priorities.To effect sustainable development, we need to see schools as strategic intervention points. Recent times have, however, witnessed that the level of discipline and value inculcation gradually declined to near extinction. The distortion of the social setting that inculcated the ethical values in the young generation has called for a need to remedy the gap. The EIU/GCED is strategically tailored to inculcate Table of Contents moral principles and values in the children through the direct contact and support of the teachers of Early Childhood Development (ECD), both primary and postprimary levels.The Nakaseke Core Primary Teachers’ College (PTC) is mandated to mainstream and promote the social uprightness of the community being a primary stakeholder in the integration of EIU/GCED in the Ugandan Primary Schools (PS) and Primary Teachers Education (PTE) Curriculum. Consequently, the training programmes were designed to enhance the capacity of PTC’s administrators, tutors and support staff, pre-service student teachers, district education officers and primary school teachers to inculcate the EIU/GCED moral values and principles among the learners. Students are then expected to apply EIU/GCED principles to their families and communities, and uphold the values of integrity, honesty, justice, responsibility, respect for humanity, hard work, unity and creativity. Global Partnership for Education Results Report 2018 Année de publication: 2018 Auteur institutionnel: Global Partnership for Education (GPE) The GPE Results Report 2018 shows progress against agreed-upon targets and identifies critical gaps that need to be addressed. The end of national models? Integration courses and citizenship trajectories in Europe Année de publication: 2007 Auteur: Dirk Jacobs, Andrea Rea Several European countries have recently introduced, or are planning to introduce, citizenship trajectories (voluntary or obligatory inclusion programmes for recent immigrants) or citizen integration tests (tests one should pass to be able to acquire permanent residence or state citizenship). Authors such as Joppke claim that this is an articulation of a more general shift towards the logic of assimilation(and away from a multicultural agenda) in integration policy paradigms of European states. Integration policies would even be converging in such a fashion that it would no longer make sense to think in terms of national models for immigrant integration. The empirical fact of diffusion of civic integration policies throughout Europe cannot be denied. This paper claims that there is, however, still sufficient distinctiveness between immigrant integration policies in order to continue and use an analytical framework that distinguishes national models.  서울교육 2016년 겨울호 (제58권 통권 225호) Année de publication: 2016 Auteur institutionnel: 서울특별시교육청 교육연구정보원 권두칼럼:혁신미래교육으로서의 세계시민교육특별기획: 평화롭고 조화로운 공존! 세계시민교육세계시민교육이란 무엇인가공존과 상생을 향한 서울의 세계시민교육단위학교 세계시민교육 운영 방안세계시민교육 실천 현장 해외교육:세계시민교육의 해외 동향 출처 URL:http://www.serii.re.kr/photo/viw.do?method=getView&mcode=S029a&seq=921 Promoting health and literacy for women's empowerment Année de publication: 2016 Auteur: Anna Robinson-Pant This publication is the third in a series of research studies focused on literacy and women’s empowerment. Its aim is to contribute to the development of crosssectoral approaches to the provision of adult literacy, education and training, traversing policy on education, family, integration, citizenship, health, social welfare and public finance. This paper uses a number of specific examples to show how literacy programmes for young people and adults, with a particular focus on young and adult women, can contribute to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals.