1st Edition

Social Justice Education in European Multi-ethnic Schools Addressing the Goals of Intercultural Education

    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    200 Pages
    by Routledge

    Winner of the American Educational Studies Association Critics’ Choice Book Award, 2019

    Europe is a multi-ethnic society experiencing a rise of anti-immigration, racist, xenophobic discourses, and right-wing political rhetoric and movements proposing legislation to further solidify structural inequality and institutionalized systems of oppression that fuel educational inequities. Social Justice Education in European Multi-ethnic Schools brings together researchers in the fields of sociology and education to examine debates in multicultural education. Drawing on critical theory, the book takes an in-depth look at how these challenges are being addressed (or not addressed) in educational contexts and in the proposed framework of intercultural education adopted as a conceptual and educational framework by the European Union over the last two decades.

    The book begins with an analysis of the sociological models and theories of migration and their connection to multiculturalism and interculturalism. It engages in the current debate between multiculturalism and interculturalism, bringing to light the "political rhetoric" that fueled narratives about the "failures" of multiculturalism, which ushered in the intercultural framework. It puts forth a critical analysis of interculturalism, linking it to neoliberalism, and policies of civic integration and the concept of govermentality. Advocating for a transformative framework informed in social justice education that aims to promote more equity in schools, it critically analyzes and discusses intercultural education, the pedagogical extension of interculturalism, as per the European documents highlighting its goals, pedagogies, tensions, and challenges.

    Social Justice Education in European Multi-ethnic Schools will be of great interest to academics, researchers, and scholars in the fields of intercultural, multicultural, and transformative education.

    Foreword: Paul Gorsky

    Introduction

    Part 1:Intercultural education: Origins, current thinking, practice and critiques

    1. Social theories of migration, political realities, and the rise of interculturalism
    2. Intercultural education: theoretical model and strategies for implementation
    3. Talking back: critical theory and critical pedagogy
    4. Intercultural education in Italian schools: A case study

    Part 2: Theory in practice: "us and them", intergroup friendships, intergroup dialogue, and the promise of social justice education

    1. "Us and them," the social construction of race, intersectionality and the importance of discussing race
    2. Intergroup relationships in school, intergroup contact, & prejudice reduction: is it enough?
    3. Social justice education and anti-colonial educational frameworks and pedagogy

    Final thoughts

    Afterword: Maurizio Ambrosini

    Biography

    Cinzia Pica-Smith is an Associate Professor in both the Department of Human Services and Rehabilitation Studies and the Education Department at Assumption College in Worcester, Massachusetts in the United States.



    Rina Manuela Contini is an expert in Welfare Theories and Social Intervention in the Department of Management & Business Administration at the University of Chieti-Pescara in Italy and is certified at the Associate Professor level in sociology of communication and cultural processes.



    Carmen N. Veloria is an Associate Professor in both the Department of Education and Department of Sociology at Suffolk University in Boston, Massachusetts in the United States.

    * Winner of the 2019 American Educational Studies Association's Critics' Choice Book Award! *

    "Immigration is the issue of our times. It is polarizing politics in Europe and North America and leaving those directly affected by the experience targeted, discriminated against, and frequently, marginalized. This important new book provides scholarly perspectives on the various factors influencing immigration and the adaptation of immigrants to the lands where they settle. Well researched and far-reaching in its scope and relevance, this book will be an invaluable resource to those who seek to understand a social phenomenon that will define our lives for many years to come."

    Pedro A. Noguera, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Education, Faculty Director, Center for the Transformation of Schools, University of California Los Angeles Graduate School of Education & Information Studies.

    "As multiculturalism has been declared dead across Europe, interculturalism has been embraced with enthusiasm by policy-makers, academics, and educators. This valuable study exposes the vacuity of the new speak, which ignores widening power disparities and inequality in our brave new neoliberal world."

    Christian Joppke, Professor of Sociology, Executive Director, Institute of Sociology, University of Berne, Switzerland.

    "Full of important, often critical, framing. Pica-Smith, Contini, and Veloria nudge us toward a deeper, more sophisticated, more transformative view of intercultural education . . . They wrap a critical view around frameworks and practices that tend to be depoliticized in schools prior to implementation, urging us toward integrity despite all the possible detours."

    Paul C. Gorski, PhD, Founder and Director of the Equity Literacy Institute.