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  • Petite enfance et éducation / Early childhood and education

    Nouvelles perspectives sur l’éducation et l’accueil des jeunes enfants / New Perspectives on Early Childhood Education and Care

    8 publications

  • Education and Struggle

    Narrative, Dialogue, and the Political Production of Meaning

    ISSN: 2168-6432

    "WE ARE THE STORIES WE TELL. The series "Education and Struggle" focuses on conflict as a discursive process where people struggle for legitimacy and the narrative process becomes a political struggle for meaning. But this series will also include the voices of authors and activists who are involved in conflicts over material necessities in their communities, schools, places of worship, and public squares as part of an ongoing search for dignity, self-determination and autonomy. This series focuses on conflict and struggle within the realm of educational politics based around a series of interrelated themes: indigenous struggles; western-Islamic conflicts; globalization and the clash of worldviews; neoliberalism as the war within;colonization and neocolonization; the coloniality of power and decolonial pedagogy; war and conflict and the struggle for liberation. It publishes narrative accounts of specific struggles as well as theorizing "conflict narratives" and the political production of meaning in educational studies. During this time of global conflict and the crisis of capitalism, Education and Struggle promises to be on the cutting edge of social, cultural, educational and political transformation. Central to the series is the idea that language is essentially a dialogical production that is formed through a process of social conflict and interaction. The aim is to focus on key semiotic, literary andpolitical concepts as a basis for a philosophy of language and culture where the underlying materialist philosophy of language and culture serves as the basis for the larger project that we might call dialogism (after Bakhtin’s usage). As the late V.N. Volosinov suggests “Without signs there is no ideology”, “Everything ideological possesses semiotic value” and “individual consciousness is a socio-ideological fact”. It is a small step to claim, therefore, “consciousness itself can arise and become a viable fact only in the material embodiment of signs”. This series is a vehicle for materialist semiotics in the narrative and dialogue of education and struggle."

    39 publications

  • PHILOSOPHY AND THEORY IN HIGHER EDUCATION

    ISSN: 2578-5761

    162 publications

  • Critical Education and Ethics

    ISSN: 2166-1359

    The Critical Education and Ethics series intends to systematically analyze the pitfalls of social structures such as race, class, and gender as they relate to edu-cational issues. Books in the series contain theoretical work grounded in prag-matic, society-changing practices. The series places value on ethical responses, as prophetic commitments to change the conditions under which education takes place. The series aims to (1) Further the ethical understanding linking broader social issues to education by exploring the environmental, health-related, and faith/spiritual responses to our educational times and policy, and (2) Ground these works in the everyday world of the classroom, viewing how schools are impacted by what critical researchers do. Both theoretically and practically, the series aims to identify itself as an agent for community change. The Critical Education and Ethics series welcomes work from emerging scholars as well as those already established in the field.

    18 publications

  • Inclusion and Teacher Education

    Historically, inclusive education developed as a reaction to the exclusion of students of minoritized identity groups marked by race, language, sexual orientation, disability, etc. Our position in this series is that inclusion can and should be more. It can be understood as embracing and planning for difference, building relationships across difference, teaching and learning that acknowledges and supports difference while also minimizing the use of identity categories as the foundation for arguments about inclusion. In other words, the silos of educational discourse based on identity categories need to be broken down, little by little, to reconceptualize inclusion as just, compassionate, and creative ways of living, teaching, and learning in a complex and diverse world. Inclusive teaching depends on deeply respectful relationships between teachers, students, and community members. Books in the series must make clear connections between theory and practice. Both are necessary ingredients for inclusion. This series will help teacher educators prepare teachers to be knowledgeable and skillful in teaching all students, regardless of their differences. Historically, inclusive education developed as a reaction to the exclusion of students of minoritized identity groups marked by race, language, sexual orientation, disability, etc. Our position in this series is that inclusion can and should be more. It can be understood as embracing and planning for difference, building relationships across difference, teaching and learning that acknowledges and supports difference while also minimizing the use of identity categories as the foundation for arguments about inclusion. In other words, the silos of educational discourse based on identity categories need to be broken down, little by little, to reconceptualize inclusion as just, compassionate, and creative ways of living, teaching, and learning in a complex and diverse world. Inclusive teaching depends on deeply respectful relationships between teachers, students, and community members. Books in the series must make clear connections between theory and practice. Both are necessary ingredients for inclusion. This series will help teacher educators prepare teachers to be knowledgeable and skillful in teaching all students, regardless of their differences. Historically, inclusive education developed as a reaction to the exclusion of students of minoritized identity groups marked by race, language, sexual orientation, disability, etc. Our position in this series is that inclusion can and should be more. It can be understood as embracing and planning for difference, building relationships across difference, teaching and learning that acknowledges and supports difference while also minimizing the use of identity categories as the foundation for arguments about inclusion. In other words, the silos of educational discourse based on identity categories need to be broken down, little by little, to reconceptualize inclusion as just, compassionate, and creative ways of living, teaching, and learning in a complex and diverse world. Inclusive teaching depends on deeply respectful relationships between teachers, students, and community members. Books in the series must make clear connections between theory and practice. Both are necessary ingredients for inclusion. This series will help teacher educators prepare teachers to be knowledgeable and skillful in teaching all students, regardless of their differences.

    7 publications

  • Title: The “Trouble” with School Behavior and Discipline Policies in Neoliberal Times
  • Title: Neoliberalism and After?

    Neoliberalism and After?

    Education, Social Policy, and the Crisis of Western Capitalism
    by Michael Adrian Peters (Author)
    ©2011 Textbook
  • Title: Neoliberal Developments in Higher Education

    Neoliberal Developments in Higher Education

    The United Kingdom and Germany
    by Rosalind Pritchard (Author) 2012
    ©2011 Monographs
  • Title: Fighting Academic Repression and Neoliberal Education

    Fighting Academic Repression and Neoliberal Education

    Resistance, Reclaiming, Organizing, and Black Lives Matter in Education
    by Anthony J. Nocella II (Volume editor) Erik Juergensmeyer (Volume editor) 2019
    ©2017 Textbook
  • Title: Parody and Pedagogy in the Age of Neoliberalism

    Parody and Pedagogy in the Age of Neoliberalism

    by Michael Lucas (Author) 2020
    ©2019 Monographs
  • Title: Bullshit Towers

    Bullshit Towers

    Neoliberalism and Managerialism in Universities
    by Margaret Sims (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: ‘People look at you like you’re mad if you say good things about academia’: Collective Negativity, Anti-neoliberalism, and Hostility to Institutions in UK Higher Education – The Dark Side of Solidarity?
  • Title: Critical Action Research Challenging Neoliberal Language and Literacies Education

    Critical Action Research Challenging Neoliberal Language and Literacies Education

    Auto and Duoethnographies of Global Experiences
    by Antoinette Gagné (Volume editor) Amir Kalan (Volume editor) Sreemali Herath (Volume editor) 2022
    ©2022 Textbook
  • Title: 2. The Neoliberal and Neoracist Potentialities of International Doctoral Student of Color Admissions in Graduate Education Programs
  • Title: Narratives of Money & Crime

    Narratives of Money & Crime

    Neoliberalism in Film, Literature and Popular Culture
    by Yasmin Temelli (Volume editor) Hans Bouchard (Volume editor) 2021
    ©2022 Edited Collection
  • Title: 1. The Neoliberal Logic of Service-Learning

    1. The Neoliberal Logic of Service-Learning

    by Megan Snider Bailey (Author)
  • Title: Neoliberalismo y hermenéuticas de derechos humanos en México y en el MERCOSUR

    Neoliberalismo y hermenéuticas de derechos humanos en México y en el MERCOSUR

    Un campo de batalla
    by Orlando Inocencio Aguirre Martínez (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: Animal Edutainment in a Neoliberal Era

    Animal Edutainment in a Neoliberal Era

    Politics, Pedagogy, and Practice in the Contemporary Aquarium
    by Teresa Lloro (Author) 2020
    ©2021 Monographs
  • Title: Resisting Neoliberal Schooling

    Resisting Neoliberal Schooling

    Dismantling the Rubricization and Corporatization of Higher Education
    by Anthony J. Nocella II (Volume editor) 2024
    ©2024 Textbook
  • Title: Private Learning, Public Needs

    Private Learning, Public Needs

    The Neoliberal Assault on Democratic Education
    by Eric J. Weiner (Author)
    ©2005 Textbook
  • Title: Realizing Nonviolent Resilience

    Realizing Nonviolent Resilience

    Neoliberalism, Societal Trauma, and Marginalized Voice
    by Jeremy A. Rinker (Volume editor) Jerry T. Lawler (Volume editor) 2020
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: From Protest to Surveillance – The Political Rationality of Mobile Media

    From Protest to Surveillance – The Political Rationality of Mobile Media

    Modalities of Neoliberalism
    by Oliver Leistert (Author) 2013
    ©2013 Thesis
  • Title: Transnational Perspectives on Culture, Policy, and Education

    Transnational Perspectives on Culture, Policy, and Education

    Redirecting Cultural Studies in Neoliberal Times
    by Cameron McCarthy (Volume editor) Cathryn Teasley (Volume editor)
    ©2008 Textbook
  • Title: Decolonization(s) and Education

    Decolonization(s) and Education

    New Polities and New Men
    by Marcelo Caruso (Author) Daniel Maul (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Edited Collection
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