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The values of global citizenship education and implications for social justice

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

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The values of global citizenship education and implications for social justice. / Hatley, Jenny.
Lancaster University, 2018. 199 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

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APA

Hatley, J. (2018). The values of global citizenship education and implications for social justice. [Doctoral Thesis, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University. https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/351

Vancouver

Hatley J. The values of global citizenship education and implications for social justice. Lancaster University, 2018. 199 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/351

Author

Hatley, Jenny. / The values of global citizenship education and implications for social justice. Lancaster University, 2018. 199 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{907cf05747b94bd5b8f78441b8208b2e,
title = "The values of global citizenship education and implications for social justice",
abstract = "Target 4.7 of the Sustainable Development Goals promotes Global Citizenship Education as a vehicle to develop the skills, values and attitudes of learners so that they may work towards the resolution of the interconnected challenges facing the world today. Underpinning UNESCO{\textquoteright}s approach to global citizenship education are {\textquoteleft}Universal Values{\textquoteright} said to apply to all people everywhere on the basis of a common humanity.I adopt the position that values act as motivators of action and that values also enable evaluation of which actions are deemed desirable and worthwhile. Which values are promoted can motivate action in directions which may serve some agendas over others. With the critique that UNESCO furthers the dominance of western powers, the role of universal values to motivate the action of global citizens towards mutual human wellbeing or towards action that serves the powerful, becomes a key area for analysis.Using a multimodal critical discourse analysis of 8 key documents within UNESCO{\textquoteright}s Global Citizenship Education, I argue that UNESCO exhibit a controlled narrative around values and have defined the {\textquoteleft}appropriate{\textquoteright} global citizen. In so doing, UNESCO influence the subjectivities of global citizens according to UNESCO{\textquoteright}s agenda and this furthers the agenda of western powers. Further, I argue that UNESCO{\textquoteright}s values are abstract and divorced from social contexts. This denies recognition of alternative values and ways of doing global citizenship more suited to local contexts potentially engendering greater participation as global citizens. Drawing on Fraser{\textquoteright}s concept of justice as Participatory Parity, I argue that UNESCO{\textquoteright}s misrecognition of these alternatives is unjust and further that this is potentially generative of the injustices of misrepresentation and maldistribution, compounding a lack of participatory parity. I conclude that UNESCO must afford recognition to alternative values and ways of doing global citizenship such that global citizenship education becomes more socially just.",
keywords = "global citizenship, Social Justice, Values, education, Recognition, participatory parity, Fraser",
author = "Jenny Hatley",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/351",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - The values of global citizenship education and implications for social justice

AU - Hatley, Jenny

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Target 4.7 of the Sustainable Development Goals promotes Global Citizenship Education as a vehicle to develop the skills, values and attitudes of learners so that they may work towards the resolution of the interconnected challenges facing the world today. Underpinning UNESCO’s approach to global citizenship education are ‘Universal Values’ said to apply to all people everywhere on the basis of a common humanity.I adopt the position that values act as motivators of action and that values also enable evaluation of which actions are deemed desirable and worthwhile. Which values are promoted can motivate action in directions which may serve some agendas over others. With the critique that UNESCO furthers the dominance of western powers, the role of universal values to motivate the action of global citizens towards mutual human wellbeing or towards action that serves the powerful, becomes a key area for analysis.Using a multimodal critical discourse analysis of 8 key documents within UNESCO’s Global Citizenship Education, I argue that UNESCO exhibit a controlled narrative around values and have defined the ‘appropriate’ global citizen. In so doing, UNESCO influence the subjectivities of global citizens according to UNESCO’s agenda and this furthers the agenda of western powers. Further, I argue that UNESCO’s values are abstract and divorced from social contexts. This denies recognition of alternative values and ways of doing global citizenship more suited to local contexts potentially engendering greater participation as global citizens. Drawing on Fraser’s concept of justice as Participatory Parity, I argue that UNESCO’s misrecognition of these alternatives is unjust and further that this is potentially generative of the injustices of misrepresentation and maldistribution, compounding a lack of participatory parity. I conclude that UNESCO must afford recognition to alternative values and ways of doing global citizenship such that global citizenship education becomes more socially just.

AB - Target 4.7 of the Sustainable Development Goals promotes Global Citizenship Education as a vehicle to develop the skills, values and attitudes of learners so that they may work towards the resolution of the interconnected challenges facing the world today. Underpinning UNESCO’s approach to global citizenship education are ‘Universal Values’ said to apply to all people everywhere on the basis of a common humanity.I adopt the position that values act as motivators of action and that values also enable evaluation of which actions are deemed desirable and worthwhile. Which values are promoted can motivate action in directions which may serve some agendas over others. With the critique that UNESCO furthers the dominance of western powers, the role of universal values to motivate the action of global citizens towards mutual human wellbeing or towards action that serves the powerful, becomes a key area for analysis.Using a multimodal critical discourse analysis of 8 key documents within UNESCO’s Global Citizenship Education, I argue that UNESCO exhibit a controlled narrative around values and have defined the ‘appropriate’ global citizen. In so doing, UNESCO influence the subjectivities of global citizens according to UNESCO’s agenda and this furthers the agenda of western powers. Further, I argue that UNESCO’s values are abstract and divorced from social contexts. This denies recognition of alternative values and ways of doing global citizenship more suited to local contexts potentially engendering greater participation as global citizens. Drawing on Fraser’s concept of justice as Participatory Parity, I argue that UNESCO’s misrecognition of these alternatives is unjust and further that this is potentially generative of the injustices of misrepresentation and maldistribution, compounding a lack of participatory parity. I conclude that UNESCO must afford recognition to alternative values and ways of doing global citizenship such that global citizenship education becomes more socially just.

KW - global citizenship

KW - Social Justice

KW - Values

KW - education

KW - Recognition

KW - participatory parity

KW - Fraser

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/351

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/351

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -