Pedagogy of Hope for Global Social Justice: Sustainable Futures for People and the Planet
Herausgeber: Bourn, Douglas; Bentall, Clare; Tarozzi, Massimiliano
Pedagogy of Hope for Global Social Justice: Sustainable Futures for People and the Planet
Herausgeber: Bourn, Douglas; Bentall, Clare; Tarozzi, Massimiliano
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Following Paulo Freire and his concept of pedagogy of hope, this open access book explores the educational role of hope as an approach to learning about global issues in different areas of the world. Climate change, racism, and the COVID-19 pandemic have shown more than ever the need for a global shift in education policy and practice. This book provides a conceptual framework of global education and learning and the role it can play in addressing these social and environmental challenges. Written by scholars based in Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Ghana, India, Italy, Portugal South…mehr
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Following Paulo Freire and his concept of pedagogy of hope, this open access book explores the educational role of hope as an approach to learning about global issues in different areas of the world. Climate change, racism, and the COVID-19 pandemic have shown more than ever the need for a global shift in education policy and practice. This book provides a conceptual framework of global education and learning and the role it can play in addressing these social and environmental challenges. Written by scholars based in Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Ghana, India, Italy, Portugal South Africa, Spain, the UK and the USA, the book addresses a range of local and global issues from global citizenship education in Latin America to training teachers in global education. The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by Knowledge Unlatched.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Advances in Education for Sust
- Verlag: BLOOMSBURY ACADEMIC
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. November 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9781350326262
- ISBN-10: 1350326267
- Artikelnr.: 66402901
- Advances in Education for Sust
- Verlag: BLOOMSBURY ACADEMIC
- Seitenzahl: 288
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. November 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9781350326262
- ISBN-10: 1350326267
- Artikelnr.: 66402901
Douglas Bourn is Professor of Development Education and Director of Development Education Research Centre at IOE, UCL's Faculty of Education and Society, University College London, UK. He is the editor of The Bloomsbury Handbook of Global Education and Learning (2020) and Education for Social Change (2022), both published by Bloomsbury. Massimiliano Tarozzi is UNESCO Chair in Global Citizenship Education in Higher Education and Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Communication Studies at the University of Bologna, Italy, where he is Founding Director of the International Research Centre on Global Citizenship Education. He is co-author, with Carlos Alberto Torres, of Global Citizenship Education and the Crises of Multiculturalism (2016) and Grounded Theory (2020), both published by Bloomsbury.
Series Editors' Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction: Introducing Pedagogy of Hope for Global Social Justice
Massimiliano Tarozzi (University of Bologna
Italy) Part I: Conceptualising Hope and global social justice 1. Global Citizenship Education and Sustainability as Real Utopias
Carlos Alberto Torres (University of California Los Angeles
USA) 2. Global Citizenship Education in Times of Pandemic: New Approaches for Transforming the World
Manuela Mesa (Instituto Universitario DEMOSPAZ
Spain) 3. Utopia
Ecopedagogy
and Citizenships: Teaching for Socio-Environmental Justice
Development
and Planetary Sustainability
Greg William Misiaszek (Beijing Normal University
China) and Diana Cristina Oróstegui González (UCLA
USA) 4. Global Values in School Curricula
Annette Scheunpflug
Martina Osterrieder
Anne-Christine Banze and Andrea Abele-Brehm (University of Bamberg
Germany) Part II: Global Perspectives on Global Social Justice 5. Non Western Perspectives in Framing Global Citizenship Education: The Role of Higher Education Institutions
Mario R. Smith
Abigail Simons
Emma Wagener
Michelle Andipatin and Jose Frantz (University of the Western Cape
South Africa) 6. A Social Network Analysis of Global Citizenship Education in Europe and North America
Massimiliano Tarozzi (University of Bologna
Italy) and Lynette Schultz (University of Alberta
Canada) 7. Transforming a Global Competence Agenda Into Pedagogies of Intercultural Understanding and Student Voice: An Australian Case Study
Karena Menzie-Ballantyne and Miriam Ham (CQUniversity
Australia) 8. How Chinese Philosophies Affect the Chinese Understanding of Global Citizenship Education
Jun Teng (Beijing Normal University
China) and Yuxuan Gong (SUNY
USA) 9. Decolonizing Citizenship
Becoming Planetary with Paulo Freire's Hope-In-Action in Brazilian Education
Silvia Elisabeth Moraes
Luiz Botelho Albuquerque and Diana Nara da Silva Oliveira (University of Sao. Paulo
Brazil) Part III: Applying Global Social Justice 10. Transformative Social and Emotional Learning and Digital Learning for Global Citizenship Education: Limits and Possibilities
Yoko Mochizuki (UNESCO Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Education for Peace and Sustainable Development
India) 11. The Evolving Development Education in Ghana: Implications for Social Justice and Pedagogies of Hope
John Kwame Boateng
Ellen M. Osei-Tutu and Olivia A. T. Frimpong Kwapong (University of Ghana
Ghana) 12. Global Education for Teachers: Online Continuing Professional Development as a Source of Hope in Challenging Times
Nicole Blum and Frances Hunt (UCL Institute of Education
UK) 13. Gender Equality - the Key Role of a Pedagogy of Critical Hope and Global Social Justice
Sandra Saúde (Polytechnic Institute of Beja
Portugal) and Lisa Ferro (Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences
Portugal) 14. Social Justice and Hope: Teachers' Continuing Professional Development in South Africa
Joyce Raanhuis (Cape Peninsula University of Technology
South Africa) Conclusion: Towards a Pedagogy of Hope For Global Social Justice
Douglas Bourn (UCL Institute of Education
UK) Index
Massimiliano Tarozzi (University of Bologna
Italy) Part I: Conceptualising Hope and global social justice 1. Global Citizenship Education and Sustainability as Real Utopias
Carlos Alberto Torres (University of California Los Angeles
USA) 2. Global Citizenship Education in Times of Pandemic: New Approaches for Transforming the World
Manuela Mesa (Instituto Universitario DEMOSPAZ
Spain) 3. Utopia
Ecopedagogy
and Citizenships: Teaching for Socio-Environmental Justice
Development
and Planetary Sustainability
Greg William Misiaszek (Beijing Normal University
China) and Diana Cristina Oróstegui González (UCLA
USA) 4. Global Values in School Curricula
Annette Scheunpflug
Martina Osterrieder
Anne-Christine Banze and Andrea Abele-Brehm (University of Bamberg
Germany) Part II: Global Perspectives on Global Social Justice 5. Non Western Perspectives in Framing Global Citizenship Education: The Role of Higher Education Institutions
Mario R. Smith
Abigail Simons
Emma Wagener
Michelle Andipatin and Jose Frantz (University of the Western Cape
South Africa) 6. A Social Network Analysis of Global Citizenship Education in Europe and North America
Massimiliano Tarozzi (University of Bologna
Italy) and Lynette Schultz (University of Alberta
Canada) 7. Transforming a Global Competence Agenda Into Pedagogies of Intercultural Understanding and Student Voice: An Australian Case Study
Karena Menzie-Ballantyne and Miriam Ham (CQUniversity
Australia) 8. How Chinese Philosophies Affect the Chinese Understanding of Global Citizenship Education
Jun Teng (Beijing Normal University
China) and Yuxuan Gong (SUNY
USA) 9. Decolonizing Citizenship
Becoming Planetary with Paulo Freire's Hope-In-Action in Brazilian Education
Silvia Elisabeth Moraes
Luiz Botelho Albuquerque and Diana Nara da Silva Oliveira (University of Sao. Paulo
Brazil) Part III: Applying Global Social Justice 10. Transformative Social and Emotional Learning and Digital Learning for Global Citizenship Education: Limits and Possibilities
Yoko Mochizuki (UNESCO Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Education for Peace and Sustainable Development
India) 11. The Evolving Development Education in Ghana: Implications for Social Justice and Pedagogies of Hope
John Kwame Boateng
Ellen M. Osei-Tutu and Olivia A. T. Frimpong Kwapong (University of Ghana
Ghana) 12. Global Education for Teachers: Online Continuing Professional Development as a Source of Hope in Challenging Times
Nicole Blum and Frances Hunt (UCL Institute of Education
UK) 13. Gender Equality - the Key Role of a Pedagogy of Critical Hope and Global Social Justice
Sandra Saúde (Polytechnic Institute of Beja
Portugal) and Lisa Ferro (Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences
Portugal) 14. Social Justice and Hope: Teachers' Continuing Professional Development in South Africa
Joyce Raanhuis (Cape Peninsula University of Technology
South Africa) Conclusion: Towards a Pedagogy of Hope For Global Social Justice
Douglas Bourn (UCL Institute of Education
UK) Index
Series Editors' Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction: Introducing Pedagogy of Hope for Global Social Justice
Massimiliano Tarozzi (University of Bologna
Italy) Part I: Conceptualising Hope and global social justice 1. Global Citizenship Education and Sustainability as Real Utopias
Carlos Alberto Torres (University of California Los Angeles
USA) 2. Global Citizenship Education in Times of Pandemic: New Approaches for Transforming the World
Manuela Mesa (Instituto Universitario DEMOSPAZ
Spain) 3. Utopia
Ecopedagogy
and Citizenships: Teaching for Socio-Environmental Justice
Development
and Planetary Sustainability
Greg William Misiaszek (Beijing Normal University
China) and Diana Cristina Oróstegui González (UCLA
USA) 4. Global Values in School Curricula
Annette Scheunpflug
Martina Osterrieder
Anne-Christine Banze and Andrea Abele-Brehm (University of Bamberg
Germany) Part II: Global Perspectives on Global Social Justice 5. Non Western Perspectives in Framing Global Citizenship Education: The Role of Higher Education Institutions
Mario R. Smith
Abigail Simons
Emma Wagener
Michelle Andipatin and Jose Frantz (University of the Western Cape
South Africa) 6. A Social Network Analysis of Global Citizenship Education in Europe and North America
Massimiliano Tarozzi (University of Bologna
Italy) and Lynette Schultz (University of Alberta
Canada) 7. Transforming a Global Competence Agenda Into Pedagogies of Intercultural Understanding and Student Voice: An Australian Case Study
Karena Menzie-Ballantyne and Miriam Ham (CQUniversity
Australia) 8. How Chinese Philosophies Affect the Chinese Understanding of Global Citizenship Education
Jun Teng (Beijing Normal University
China) and Yuxuan Gong (SUNY
USA) 9. Decolonizing Citizenship
Becoming Planetary with Paulo Freire's Hope-In-Action in Brazilian Education
Silvia Elisabeth Moraes
Luiz Botelho Albuquerque and Diana Nara da Silva Oliveira (University of Sao. Paulo
Brazil) Part III: Applying Global Social Justice 10. Transformative Social and Emotional Learning and Digital Learning for Global Citizenship Education: Limits and Possibilities
Yoko Mochizuki (UNESCO Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Education for Peace and Sustainable Development
India) 11. The Evolving Development Education in Ghana: Implications for Social Justice and Pedagogies of Hope
John Kwame Boateng
Ellen M. Osei-Tutu and Olivia A. T. Frimpong Kwapong (University of Ghana
Ghana) 12. Global Education for Teachers: Online Continuing Professional Development as a Source of Hope in Challenging Times
Nicole Blum and Frances Hunt (UCL Institute of Education
UK) 13. Gender Equality - the Key Role of a Pedagogy of Critical Hope and Global Social Justice
Sandra Saúde (Polytechnic Institute of Beja
Portugal) and Lisa Ferro (Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences
Portugal) 14. Social Justice and Hope: Teachers' Continuing Professional Development in South Africa
Joyce Raanhuis (Cape Peninsula University of Technology
South Africa) Conclusion: Towards a Pedagogy of Hope For Global Social Justice
Douglas Bourn (UCL Institute of Education
UK) Index
Massimiliano Tarozzi (University of Bologna
Italy) Part I: Conceptualising Hope and global social justice 1. Global Citizenship Education and Sustainability as Real Utopias
Carlos Alberto Torres (University of California Los Angeles
USA) 2. Global Citizenship Education in Times of Pandemic: New Approaches for Transforming the World
Manuela Mesa (Instituto Universitario DEMOSPAZ
Spain) 3. Utopia
Ecopedagogy
and Citizenships: Teaching for Socio-Environmental Justice
Development
and Planetary Sustainability
Greg William Misiaszek (Beijing Normal University
China) and Diana Cristina Oróstegui González (UCLA
USA) 4. Global Values in School Curricula
Annette Scheunpflug
Martina Osterrieder
Anne-Christine Banze and Andrea Abele-Brehm (University of Bamberg
Germany) Part II: Global Perspectives on Global Social Justice 5. Non Western Perspectives in Framing Global Citizenship Education: The Role of Higher Education Institutions
Mario R. Smith
Abigail Simons
Emma Wagener
Michelle Andipatin and Jose Frantz (University of the Western Cape
South Africa) 6. A Social Network Analysis of Global Citizenship Education in Europe and North America
Massimiliano Tarozzi (University of Bologna
Italy) and Lynette Schultz (University of Alberta
Canada) 7. Transforming a Global Competence Agenda Into Pedagogies of Intercultural Understanding and Student Voice: An Australian Case Study
Karena Menzie-Ballantyne and Miriam Ham (CQUniversity
Australia) 8. How Chinese Philosophies Affect the Chinese Understanding of Global Citizenship Education
Jun Teng (Beijing Normal University
China) and Yuxuan Gong (SUNY
USA) 9. Decolonizing Citizenship
Becoming Planetary with Paulo Freire's Hope-In-Action in Brazilian Education
Silvia Elisabeth Moraes
Luiz Botelho Albuquerque and Diana Nara da Silva Oliveira (University of Sao. Paulo
Brazil) Part III: Applying Global Social Justice 10. Transformative Social and Emotional Learning and Digital Learning for Global Citizenship Education: Limits and Possibilities
Yoko Mochizuki (UNESCO Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Education for Peace and Sustainable Development
India) 11. The Evolving Development Education in Ghana: Implications for Social Justice and Pedagogies of Hope
John Kwame Boateng
Ellen M. Osei-Tutu and Olivia A. T. Frimpong Kwapong (University of Ghana
Ghana) 12. Global Education for Teachers: Online Continuing Professional Development as a Source of Hope in Challenging Times
Nicole Blum and Frances Hunt (UCL Institute of Education
UK) 13. Gender Equality - the Key Role of a Pedagogy of Critical Hope and Global Social Justice
Sandra Saúde (Polytechnic Institute of Beja
Portugal) and Lisa Ferro (Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences
Portugal) 14. Social Justice and Hope: Teachers' Continuing Professional Development in South Africa
Joyce Raanhuis (Cape Peninsula University of Technology
South Africa) Conclusion: Towards a Pedagogy of Hope For Global Social Justice
Douglas Bourn (UCL Institute of Education
UK) Index