Tag Archives: Nationalism

SEN Journal Online Exclusives – ‘Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Education’ (4): Education, Reconciliation, and Peace-building in the Basque Region

Our special series on Nationalism and Education from the SEN Online archives comes to an end with…

‘Advancing Peace Culture in the Basque Autonomous Community: The Basque Education Plan for Peace and Human Rights (2008-2011)’, by Stuart Durkin, in Volume 13, Issue 3 (December 2013), pp. 342-357.

‘Approved in December 2007, The Basque Education Plan for Peace and Human Rights (2008-2011) represents the most sophisticated policy development of its kind in over 30 years of autonomous governments. While by no means a panacea for ethno-nationalist conflict in this context, the policy is nevertheless a significant development and carries the potential to make a significant contribution to the cause of sustainable peace-building and reconciliation.

By way of both an exposition of its principal aims and objectives, as well as an analysis of the political furore which accompanied its development, the article exposes the policy’s principal limitation, its tendency towards indirectness. The article argues, however, that in structural terms peace education is advanced through the creation of a coordinating forum between the Basque government and organised Basque civil society. Moreover, despite this tendency towards indirectness, the policy initiates the necessary task of approaching issues hitherto largely avoided.’

ASEN Seminar: Education and Ethnopolitical Stability in the Basque Country, Chile and South Tyrol – January 29, 2014

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SEN and ASEN, in conjunction with the Department of Government, LSE, would like to invite you to our upcoming seminar titled “Education and Ethnopolitical Stability in the Basque Country, Chile and South Tyrol” as part of the ASEN Seminar Series 2013-2014. Three papers from SEN Journal’s latest special issue on “Ethnicity, Nationalism and Education” will be presented.  The seminar will take place on Wednesday, January 29, 2014 at 6:15 p.m. in KSW, Room 2.12 at the London School of Economics, 20 Kingsway.

KSW  2.12  at the LSE Campus (Please see the following link for directions http://www2.lse.ac.uk/mapsanddirections/findingyourwayaroundlse.aspx)

No Tickets Required

ASEN and SEN look forward to seeing you there.

SEN News on Sunday: January 12 – 19, 2014

 

  • The New York Times (19/01/14) explores the topic of education and nationalism in Israel, as Arabs grapple with what curriculum to teach children.
  • The Japan Times (19/01/14) also looks at nationalism and language education in East Asian countries, and argues that “English-language education is fraught with deeper undercurrents of language protectionism and national identity”.

Continue reading

SEN News on Sunday: January 5 – 12, 2014

Revisiting La Tene Art: Ideas of Ethnicity and Diaspora

 

  • Myanmar Times (11/01/14) reports on the complaints of the Rohingya ethnic minority, who have called for a change in the national census categories.
  • Think Progress (10/01/14) questions whether the United Nations (UN) is flaming the fans of ethnic conflict in South Sudan by separating ethnic groups.
  • Heritage Daily (January 2014) features an article exploring whether La Tène art should be considered an ethnic indicator of early Celtic identity.

 

 

News compiled by Karen Seegobin.

If you would like to write a response to any of these news stories, please email us at sen@lse.ac.uk.

SEN Journal Online Exclusives – ‘Ethnicity, Nationalism, and Education’ (3): Education as site of ethnic discontent in Chile

Next up in our special series on Nationalism and Education, from the SEN Online archives we have…

“Mapuche Demands during Educational Reform, the Penguin Revolution and the Chilean Winter of Discontent”, by Andrew Webb and Sarah Radcliffe (Volume 13, Issue 3, December 2013, 319-341), which deals with the inequalities in the Chilean education system as both a socio-economic and national problem.

‘Student protests in 2006 and 2011 are representative of growing public concerns over the neo-liberal socio-economic model adopted by respective governments since the military regime ended in 1990. Education has also become a contested space in which the recognition of indigenous rights – and cultural and linguistic diversity in particular – have been negotiated. This paper presents an analysis of the history of Mapuche struggles over education, in light of recent neoliberal reforms and political protests. Reforms to address large achievement differentials among indigenous populations have come through proposals for Intercultural Bilingual Education (IBE) in Chile and these, we suggest, have challenged the hegemonic education system and its assimilatory mechanisms. However its current administration reflects minimal commitments to indigenous rights and only the thinnest recognition of cultural difference. Instead the status quo of mono-cultural and mono-linguistic Chilean nationalism continues to be transmitted via the national curriculum.’