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ABSTRACT: This article discusses, principally from an English perspective, globalisation, global citizenship and two forms of education relevant to those developments (global education and citizenship education). We describe what citizenship has meant inside one nation state and ask what citizenship means, and could mean, in a globalising world. By comparing the natures of citizenship education and global education, as experienced principally in England during, approxim-ately, the last three decades, we seek to develop a clearer understanding of what has been done and what might be done in the future in order to develop education for global citizenship. We suggest that up to this point there have been significant differences between the characterisations that have been developed for global education and citizenship education. These differences are revealed through an examination of three areas: focus and origins; the attitude of the government and significant others; and the adoption of pedagogical approaches. We suggest that it would be useful to look beyond old barriers that have separated citizenship education and global education and to form a new global citizenship education. Their separation has in the past only perpetuated the old understandings of citizenship and constructed a constrained view of global education.
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Ian Davies
University of York
Mark Evans
University of Toronto
Alan Reid
University of Cambridge
British Journal of Educational Studies
University of Toronto
University of York
University of South Australia
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Davies et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0877d27de338f10b10b534 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8527.2005.00284.x