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Marinko Banjac 《教育政策杂志》2013,28(5):613-630
AbstractWithin the EU, answers and responses to detected issues and problems facing young people are regularly searched for within and through education and learning. The EU’s Structured Dialogue on youth is one of the consultation-based policy processes where education is often suggested as a solution and a highly relevant field of action helping to improve youth’s status and life. Using Foucauldian discourse analysis, this paper examines discourse about education present in selected policy texts and statements of various stakeholders and individuals active within the EU’s Structured Dialogue on youth. As an example, the first two phases of the fifth cycle of that dialogue are considered and examined, exploring perceptions of the dialogue and education and their role. The paper aims to explore the underlying political rationalities of education via which the field is governed and programmable realities created, while young people’s specific role and conduct is suggested and framed. 相似文献
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Ivan Crozier Patricia Fara Jon Hodge Brendan Kitts Robin Knight Sverre Myhra David Oldroyd Elizabeth A. Wilson Rosemary Robins Stephen Dovers John Forge Harshi Gunawardena Jenny Tannoch-Bland Loet Leydesdorff David Oldroyd David Oldroyd David Oldroyd Nicolas Rasmussen Greg Restall Helaine Selin Michael Shortland E. E. Sleinis Fiona Solomon Scott McQuire Maurice Crosland David Farrier Roslynn Haynes Sverre Myhra Colin Russell Libby Robin Karin Garrety Stephen Gaukroger Stephen Ames Wendy Varney Vojislav Bozickovic Phil Dowe 《Metascience》1996,5(2):71-192
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Citizenship education has been an important part of the European Union’s (EU) agenda to integrate a European dimension into schools’ curricula. The usage of European symbolism in citizenship education curriculum material has been an especially important (yet understudied) means not only to promote a distinct European identity and increase knowledge on EU-related topics, but also to regulate (young) EU citizens and population. The paper analyses the content related to the EU and European dimension in citizenship education textbooks and workbooks at the lower-secondary school level in Slovenia. It demonstrates that, through diverse symbolic displays, which are understood as a specific governmental technique, the idea of a European community as a site of opportunities is promoted while students are stimulated to understand themselves as subjects who must be active and responsible EU citizens. Moreover, European symbolism is employed to nurture and promote Slovenian identity as being purely European and, as such, distinct from earlier Balkan-situated, Yugoslav and socialist forms of identity and belonging. 相似文献
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