ABSTRACT
The World Yearbook of Education 2010 volume, Education and the Arab 'World': Political Projects, Struggles, and Geometries of Power, strives to do justice to the complex processes and dynamics behind the world of Arab education. Western interest in all things �Arab� has greatly increased over the course of the decade, but this interest runs the risk of forgetting that the Arab world is positioned within wider contexts of regional, geopolitical, and global processes. This volume examines Arab education in a range of contexts � regional, diasporic, and trans-national � to better understand how the field of Arab education is formed through local, regional, geopolitical and global engagements and resonances. In doing so, contributors from a range of disciplines open critical conversations about the intersections of history, culture, geopolitics, policy, and education. The World Yearbook of Education 2010 offers new conceptual and empirical approaches that deal with some of the often-neglected aspects of the study of Arab education: contested political projects; struggles towards emancipation, recognition and liberation; and a larger concern for social justice, equity, and political inclusion. Andr�lias Mazawi is associate professor in the Department of Educational Studies at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada. He is also an associate fellow at the Euro-Mediterranean Centre for Educational Research at the University of Malta.Ronald G. Sultana is professor in the Department of Education Studies at the University of Malta, where he also leads the Euro-Mediterranean Centre for Educational Research. He is the founding editor of the Mediterranean Journal of Educational Studies.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter 1|39 pages
Editorial Introduction
part I|73 pages
Contested Policyscapes
chapter 5|21 pages
Pressure Groups, Education Policy, and Curriculum Development in Lebanon
part II|63 pages
Re-calling Voices
chapter 9|15 pages
To Educate an Iraqi-Jew
part III|77 pages
Suspended Visibilities
chapter 12|11 pages
The Teaching of Amazigh in France and Morocco
part IV|58 pages
Knowledge Imaginaries
part V|65 pages
Geopolitical Predicaments