ABSTRACT

This book reveals the potential of geography to engage with citizenship. It provides:

  • theoretical signposts in the form of short, digestible explanations for key ideas such as racism, values, identity, community and social exclusion
  • a number of inset activities 'for further thinking'
  • a critique of the discipline and the pitfalls to avoid in teaching citizenship through geography
  • practical teaching suggestions.

All the contributions to this valuable book point to the capacity of geography to engage with citizenship, values, education and people - environment decision-making, on scales that range from the local to the global. It offers positive and direct ways to become involved in the thinking that must underpin any worthwhile citizenship education, for all experienced teachers, student teachers, heads of department, curriculum managers, principals and policy-makers.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

Setting the scene for geography and citizenship education

part |2 pages

Part I Contexts

chapter 2|20 pages

Citizenship education: permeation or pervasion?

Some historical pointers

chapter 3|1 pages

Citizenship and democracy education: geography’s place, an international perspective

Geography’s place: an international perspective

chapter |10 pages

Citizenship

chapter |16 pages

Invadersfromthelostworld

chapter |2 pages

Box 4.3A dilemma concerning refugees

chapter |3 pages

Acknowledgement

chapter 5|1 pages

Finding its place

Contextualising citizenship within the geography curriculum

part |2 pages

Part II Curriculum issues

chapter 6|3 pages

The seduction of community

To which space do I belong?

chapter 7|7 pages

‘Where shall I draw the line, Miss?’ The geography of exclusion

The geography of exclusion Boundaries, borders, frontiers and marches

chapter 8|11 pages

A very British subject

Questions of identity

chapter |2 pages

References

chapter 9|1 pages

Citizenship denied

The case of the Holocaust

chapter |3 pages

Box 9.1 Geography and other disciplines

chapter |1 pages

Box 9.2 The state

chapter |2 pages

Box 9.3 Social Darwinism

chapter |6 pages

Box 9.4 Nazism

part |1 pages

Part 2 A field trip to Auschwitz

chapter 10|2 pages

Towards ecological citizenship

chapter |2 pages

Box 10.2 Dialectical materialism

chapter |1 pages

Box 10.3 Power and authority

chapter |1 pages

Box 10.7 Sustainable development

chapter |1 pages

Box 10.8 Mode of regulation

chapter |1 pages

Box 10.9 Praxis

chapter |1 pages

Box 10.10 Critical theory

chapter |1 pages

Box 10.11 Valuing the environment

chapter |3 pages

Box 10.13 Engaging with the GM debate

chapter 11|7 pages

Global citizenship

Choices and change

chapter |3 pages

Box 11.1 Role play

chapter |10 pages

Box 11.2 A challenge for all

chapter 12|9 pages

Citizenship in geography classrooms

Questions of pedagogy

chapter |1 pages

Box 12.3 The teacher ‘in role’

part |2 pages

Part III Conclusion

chapter 13|1 pages

Conclusion

Citizens in a risky world

chapter |2 pages

Geography and educated citizens

chapter |4 pages

Citizenship and moral education