TY - JOUR
T1 - Characterising citizenship education in terms of its emancipatory potential: reflections from Catalonia, Colombia, England, and Pakistan
T2 - reflections from Catalonia, Colombia, England, and Pakistan
AU - Sant, Edda
AU - González-Valencia, Gustavo
AU - Shaikh, Ghazal
AU - Santisteban, Antoni
AU - da Costa, Marta
AU - Hanley, Chris
AU - Davies, Ian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2022/9/20
Y1 - 2022/9/20
N2 - This paper is a theoretical contribution to discussions about the emancipatory potential of citizenship education across four sites (i.e. Catalonia, Colombia, England, and Pakistan). By reflecting on policy and empirical data from our four contexts of study, we discuss whether citizenship education manifests different conditions of emancipatory education (modern, postmodern, and posthumous). We argue that citizenship education offers possibilities for emancipation, but these are constrained by capitalist and Enlightenment barriers. We conclude that if an emancipatory form of citizenship education is to be possible, there is a need to make room for politics in school classrooms and further politicise epistemological and anthropological assumptions. We recommend a form of citizenship education that conceptualises emancipation as our ability to respond ethically to situated challenges by thinking by ourselves with others.
AB - This paper is a theoretical contribution to discussions about the emancipatory potential of citizenship education across four sites (i.e. Catalonia, Colombia, England, and Pakistan). By reflecting on policy and empirical data from our four contexts of study, we discuss whether citizenship education manifests different conditions of emancipatory education (modern, postmodern, and posthumous). We argue that citizenship education offers possibilities for emancipation, but these are constrained by capitalist and Enlightenment barriers. We conclude that if an emancipatory form of citizenship education is to be possible, there is a need to make room for politics in school classrooms and further politicise epistemological and anthropological assumptions. We recommend a form of citizenship education that conceptualises emancipation as our ability to respond ethically to situated challenges by thinking by ourselves with others.
KW - Citizenship education
KW - crises of modernity
KW - emancipation
KW - Garcés
KW - political education
UR - https://doi.org/10.1080/03057925.2022.2110840
U2 - 10.1080/03057925.2022.2110840
DO - 10.1080/03057925.2022.2110840
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85138816480
SN - 0305-7925
JO - Compare
JF - Compare
ER -