ABSTRACT

This book brings together key perspectives from scholars in the Global South and Global North to illustrate diverse ways in which the UN’s Global Citizenship Education (GCED) agenda can promote social justice and be used as a vehicle for negotiating and learning about diverse and shared objectives in education and the global public sphere.

Recognizing the historical function of education as a prominent public sphere site, this book addresses questions around how forms of global education can serve as public sphere sites in various contexts today and in the future. Specifically, it questions established notions of education and proposes new interpretations of the relationship between practices of education and the public sphere to meet the needs of our contemporary turbulent era and a post-2020 world. By offering conceptual analyses, examples of policy and educational practices which promote global learning, democratic citizenship, common good, and perspective-taking, the text offers new critical understandings of how GCED can contribute to the public responsibilities and roles of education. Chapters consider examples such as non-formal adult education at the Mexico–US border, teachers’ responsibilities in Japan and Finland, developments in education policy and practices in Brazil, civic religious teachings in Canada, online learning in the United States and China, and support to the participation of women in higher education in Pakistan.

Given its unique approach, and the range of case studies it brings together, this book is a timely addition to the literature on education in the global public sphere. It will prove to be an invaluable resource for scholars working at the intersections of global education and transnational education policies, and for teachers involved in global education.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Critical Global Citizenship Education as a Form of Global Learning

chapter 1|14 pages

Cosmo-uBuntu Theorizing About the Global Citizen in Modernity’s Frontiers

Lived Experience in Mozambique, United States, and South Africa

chapter 2|14 pages

Dealing With Incompleteness

Cognitive Justice as a Lodestar for Teaching Global Citizenship in Higher Education in Austria

chapter 3|14 pages

From Deliberative to Contestatory Dialogue

Reconstructing Paulo Freire’s Approach to Critical Citizenship Literacy

chapter 4|14 pages

Identity, Learning, and Community After Displacement

Reimagining Belonging at the US–Mexico Border

chapter 8|16 pages

Civic Religious Literacy as a Form of Global Citizenship Education

Three Examples From Practitioner Training in Canada

chapter 9|13 pages

Imagining GCE in China’s Tianxia Cultural System

Cosmopolitanism, Common Good, and the Public Sphere

chapter 10|14 pages

Global Citizenship Education in Japanese Higher Education

From French Political Training to a Plurilingual and Multicultural Approach to Social Justice in a CLIL Setting

chapter 11|15 pages

Global Citizenship Education in the UCLA Digital Humanities Classroom

In the Light of Early German Romantic Philosophy