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What is Citizenship? Religion, Governance and Education

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What is Citizenship? Religion, Governance and Education Liam Gearon Professor of Education Roehampton University London SW15 5PH L.Gearon_at_roehampton.ac.uk – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What is Citizenship? Religion, Governance and Education


1
What is Citizenship?Religion, Governance and
Education
  • Liam Gearon Professor of EducationRoehampton
    University London SW15 5PHL.Gearon_at_roehampton.ac.
    uk

2
What is Citizenship?
  • What is Citizenship? (I) Education
  • What is Citizenship? (II) Politics and Pedagogy
  • What is Citizenship? (III) Religion, Politics and
    Pedagogy
  • Revisiting the Four Critical Contexts

3
What is Citizenship? (I) Education
  • the rapid movement of people within and across
    national boundaries
  • a growing recognition of the rights of indigenous
    peoples and minorities
  • the collapse of existing political structures and
    the fledgling growth of new ones
  • the changing role and status of women in society
  • the impact of the global economy and changing
    patterns of work and trade on social, economic
    and political ties
  • the effects of the revolution in information and
    communications technologies
  • an increasing global population and the
    consequences for the environment
  • the emergence of new forms of community and
    protest.
  • (Kerr, 2003)

4
What is Citizenship? (I) Education
  • Social and moral responsibility
  • children learning from the beginning
    self-confidence and socially and morally
    responsible behaviour both in and beyond the
    classroom, both towards those in authority and
    towards each other
  • Community involvement
  • pupils learning about and becoming helpfully
    involved in the life and concerns of their
    communities, including learning through community
    involvement and service to the community
  • Political Literacy
  • pupils learning about and how to make themselves
    effective in public life through knowledge,
    skills and values.
  • (Crick 1998)

5
What is Citizenship? (I) Education
  • Knowledge and understanding about becoming
    informed citizens
  • Developing skills of enquiry and communication
  • Developing skills of participation and
    responsible action.
  • (DfEE 1999)

6
What is Citizenship? (I) Education
  • Reviews of Citizenship
  • EPPI (2004 2005)
  • Gearon (2004)
  • UN (2005) UNESCO (2006)
  • Eurydice (2006)
  • Osler and Starkey (2006)
  • Ajebo (2007)
  • House of Commons Report (2007)
  • NFER (2006 2007)

7
What is Citizenship? (I) Education
  • Heater (1994 2004) historical
  • Audigier (1997) politically all inclusive
  • Isin and Wood (1999) search for identity
  • Crick (2000) political knowledge
  • Arnot and Dillabough (2002) feminist
    perspectives
  • Osler and Vincent (2002/4) global citizenship
  • Osler and Starkey (2006) cosmopolitan
    citizenship
  • Davies (2007) pedagogical pragmatism

8
What is Citizenship? (I) Education
  • Rationality grounded in a critical appreciation
    of social and political realities
  • Respect for diversity within the context of a
    pluralistic democracy
  • Participation arising from an acceptance of ones
    social and political responsibilities and
    appreciation of ones own rights and entitlements
  • (Davies 2007)

9
What is Citizenship? (II) Politics and Pedagogy
  • Whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and
    of the equal and inalienable rights of all
    members of the human family is the foundation of
    freedom, justice and peace in the world, whereas
    disregard and contempt for human rights have
    resulted in barbarous acts which have outraged
    the conscience of mankind (sic), and the advent
    of a world in which human beings shall enjoy
    freedom of speech and belief and freedom from
    fear and want has been proclaimed as the highest
    aspiration of the common people, whereas it is
    essential, if man (sic) is not to be compelled to
    have recourse, as a last resort, to rebellion
    against tyranny and oppression, that human rights
    should be protected by the rule of law

10
What is Citizenship? (II) Politics and Pedagogy
  • Now, therefore the General Assembly proclaims
    this Universal Declaration of Human Rights as a
    common standard of achievement for all peoples
    and all nations, to the end that every individual
    and every organ of society, keeping this
    Declaration constantly in mind, shall strive by
    teaching and education to promote respect for
    these rights and freedoms and by progressive
    measures, national and international, to secure
    their universal and effective recognition and
    observance ... (UN, 1948 available www.un.org)

11
What is Citizenship? (II) Politics and Pedagogy
  • During the 1990s there has been a resurgence of
    interest in Civic and Citizenship Education. The
    number of formal democracies in the world has
    increased from 76 (46.1) to 117 (61.3). This
    has been described as the third wave of
    democracy related to significant world events
    such as the ending of apartheid in South Africa,
    the fall of the Berlin Wall, the democratisation
    of former communist states in Eastern Europe and
    the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Civic
    education programmes have become an increasingly
    important means for countries to educate citizens
    about their rights and responsibilities.

12
What is Citizenship? (II) Politics and Pedagogy
  • Increasing pluralism within states has encouraged
    the development of civic education programmes
    that go beyond simple patriotic models of
    citizenship requiring uncritical loyalty to the
    nation state. By defining citizenship in terms
    of human rights and civic responsibilities, civic
    education programmes attempt to avoid concepts of
    citizenship that define nationality in terms of
    ethnic, religious or cultural identity. The
    aspiration is that concepts of citizenship based
    on human rights and responsibilities may make it
    more difficult to mobilise political conflict
    around identity issues (www.unesco.org follow
    links to citizenship)

13
What is Citizenship? (II) Politics and Pedagogy
  • Firstly, it can refer simply to a subjects
    rights and duties to be recognised as a legally
    permanent inhabitant of a state irrespective of
    the system of government of that state but the
    principles behind such recognition can vary
    greatly, especially in relation to migrants.
  • Secondly, it can refer to the more specific
    belief (often called civic republicanism )
    that countries that enjoy constitutional
    government, representative government or
    democracy depend upon a high degree of active
    participation by inhabitants who themselves as
    active citizens, not simply good subjects.

14
What is Citizenship? (II) Politics and Pedagogy
  • Thirdly, it can refer to an ideal (once held by
    the Stoics of antiquity, now often called global
    citizenship) that we should all act as citizens
    of one world that for the sake of peace, justice
    and human rights there must be limitations of
    international law on the sovereignty and power of
    individual states powers.
  • And fourthly, citizenship can refer to an
    educational process learning and teaching in
    schools and colleges show how to improve or
    achieve the aims inherent in the second and third
    meanings (Crick, 2004 2)

15
What is Citizenship? (III) Religion, Politics
and Pedagogy Revisiting the Four Critical
Contexts
  • Critical Context 1 Religion and Global
    Governance
  • The role of religion in public and political
    life has been historically underplayed since the
    European Enlightenment. There is now increasing
    evidence of the importance of religion in
    post-Cold War public and political life, often
    but not exclusively centring on issues of human
    rights, including freedom of religion or belief.
    This trend highlighted by a number of theorists
    of religion and education Smart (1969 1989)
    Casanova (1994) Haynes (1998) Bowker (2002)
    Woodhead (2002) Ward (2003) Runzo et al.
    (2004) Jackson (2003 2004) Gearon (2002 2005
    2006) Harpviken and Eggen Rioslien, 2005 Trigg,
    2007)

16
What is Citizenship? (III) Religion, Politics
and Pedagogy Revisiting the Four Critical
Contexts
  • Critical Context 2 Religion and the United
    Nations (UN)
  • The UN system incorporated freedom of religion
    since the
  • 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights but
    early
  • UN history downplays religious and ideological
    diversity.
  • After a long neglect (or low level treatment) of
    religion
  • explicitly, the UN Declaration on the Elimination
    of All
  • Forms of Intolerance and Discrimination Based on
    Religion
  • or Belief (1981) recognises international
    significance of
  • Religion for a stable world order (Ayton-Shenker,
    1995
  • Lerner 2000 Shattuck, 2003 Harpviken and Eggen
  • Rioslien, 2005 UNESCO, 2006 Trigg, 2007)

17
What is Citizenship? (III) Religion, Politics
and Pedagogy Revisiting the Four Critical
Contexts
  • Critical Context 3 Religion in Citizenship
    Education
  • The role of religion in citizenship education has
    been
  • underplayed. Reflecting broader global trends now
  • increasing recognition of the importance of
    religion in
  • citizenship education, although the recognition
    of the
  • importance of teaching about religion remains
    arguably
  • less strong in citizenship education than in
    religious
  • education (Heater, 2004 Lindholm et al., 2003
    UN (2005)
  • UNESCO, 2006, 2006a Ajebo, 2007 NFER, 2007)

18
What is Citizenship? (III) Religion, Politics
and Pedagogy Revisiting the Four Critical
Contexts
  • Critical Context 4 Citizenship in Religious
    Education
  • The political has been underplayed in religious
    education,
  • and contentious historical contexts sidestepped.
    The rise of
  • religion in the public sphere and the exponential
    growth
  • of citizenship education has forced religious
    education to
  • consider the political and historical (Lindholm,
    Durham and
  • Tahzib-Lies, 2003 Osmer, 2003 Larson and
    Gustavsson,
  • 2004 Ajebo, 2007 NFER, 2007 Ofsted, 2007)

19
What is Citizenship?Historical, Philosophical,
Theological and Literary
  • Render unto Caesar (Matthew 22 15-21)
  • The two trials of Jesus
  • The Letter of James
  • The First Letter of Peter
  • The Book of Revelation

20
What is Citizenship?Historical, Philosophical,
Theological and Literary
  • Classical
  • Plato Republic Phaedo
  • Aristotle Nichomachean Ethics Politics
  • Epicurus Principal Doctrines
  • Marcus Aurelius Meditations
  • Edward Gibbon The History of the Decline
  • and Fall of the Roman Empire

21
  • Phaedo. I remember the strange feeling which came
    over me at being with him. For I could hardly
    believe that I was present at the death of a
    friend, and therefore I did not pity him,
    Echecrates his mien and his language were so
    noble and fearless in the hour of death that to
    me he appeared blessed. I thought that in going
    to the other world he could not be without a
    divine call, and that he would be happy, if any
    man ever was, when he arrived there, and
    therefore I did not pity him as might seem
    natural at such a time. But neither could I feel
    the pleasure which I usually felt in
    philosophical discourse (for philosophy was the
    theme of which we spoke). I was pleased, and I
    was also pained, because I knew that he was soon
    to die, and this strange mixture of feeling was
    shared by us all to Plato, Phaedo

22
  • Then I must try to make a better impression upon
    you than I did when defending myself before the
    judges. For I am quite ready to acknowledge,
    Simmias and Cebes, that I ought to be grieved at
    death, if I were not persuaded that I am going to
    other gods who are wise and good (of this I am as
    certain as I can be of anything of the sort) and
    to men departed (though I am not so certain of
    this), who are better than those whom I leave
    behind and therefore I do not grieve as I might
    have done, for I have good hope that there is yet
    something remaining for the dead, and, as has
    been said of old, some far better thing for the
    good than for the evil. Plato Phaedo

23
What is Citizenship?Historical, Philosophical,
Theological and Literary
  • Classical and Medieval
  • Augustine City of God Confessions
  • Aquinas On Kingship Summa Theologica
  • Machiavelli The Prince

24
What is Citizenship?Historical, Philosophical,
Theological and Literary
  • Also seemingly non-political works
  • Thomas a Kempis The Imitation of Christ
  • Anonymous Cloud of Unknowing

25
What is Citizenship?Historical, Philosophical,
Theological and Literary
  • Modern
  • Hobbes Leviathan
  • Locke Second Treatise of Government
  • Rousseau On the Social Contract
  • Mill On Liberty
  • Marx and Engels Communist Manifesto
  • Theories of post-Cold War governance?
  • Fukuyama The End of History
  • Huntington The Clash of Civilisations
  • UN Alliance of Civilizations

26
What is Citizenship?Historical, Philosophical,
Theological and Literary
  • The voice from the telescreen was still pouring
    forth its tale
  • of prisoners and booty and slaughter, but the
    shouting
  • outside had died down a little. The waiters were
    turning
  • back to their work. One of them approached with
    the gin
  • bottle. Winston, sitting in a blissful dream,
    paid no attention
  • as his glass was filled up. He was not running or
    cheering
  • any longer. He was back in the Ministry of Love,
    with
  • everything forgiven, implicating everybody. He
    was in the
  • public dock, confessing everything, implicating
    everybody.
  • He was walking down the white-tiled corridor,
    with the
  • feeling of walking in sunlight, and an armed
    guard at his
  • back. The long-hoped-for bullet was entering his
    brain.

27
What is Citizenship?Historical, Philosophical,
Theological and Literary
  • He gazed up at the enormous face. Forty years it
    had taken
  • him to learn what kind of smile was hidden
    beneath the
  • dark moustache. O cruel, needless
    misunderstanding! O
  • stubborn, self-willed exile from the loving
    breast! Two gin-
  • scented tears trickled down the sides of his
    nose. But it
  • was all right, everything was all right, the
    struggle was
  • finished. He had won the victory over himself. He
    loved Big
  • Brother. (Orwell, 1949 1983 249)
  • George Orwell Nineteen Eighty-Four
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