Description
Book SynopsisWe offer in this book a collection of chapters that reflect a broad range of issues linking globalization to education in an accessible yet theoretically grounded and detailed form. The authors analyze phenomena on the global plane, in local spaces, and in the connections between the global and the local. New developments such as the growing impact of technology on education, the emergence of new policy actors, the growing expansion and segmentation of higher education, the salience of human rights, among others, are emerging as powerful agendas shaping all levels of education. In fundamental ways, the forces of globalization challenge the previous approaches and theories of national development. Recognizing the areas of convergence, dissonance, and conflict should help us grasp with greater clarity the implications of globalization for education and knowledge in the XXI century. The contributors to this book include both well-known scholars in the field of comparative education as wel
Trade ReviewThis reissue of Globalization and Education is more than just a second edition, since chapters from the first edition (published in 2000) have been substantially updated and several new chapters added. The editors and many of the contributors have been co-operating on this topic for many years; hence, the book reflects a prolonged extensive contemplation about the complexities of the topic, which undoubtedly contributes to the book’s depth and scope. Consequently, we have an accurate large volume, primarily from the field of comparative education studies, which explains some of the most relevant attributes and characteristics of the subject of included studies, which also sheds light on actual developments on all levels of education. . . .This multifaceted book presents yet another case of a larger cooperative educational study, which proves that the end of the neoliberal epoch is highly desired and as much as possible projected in the area of education. Recalling the tradition of the Enlightenment, one may say that educators and philosophers are again emphatically encouraged to invent humanity anew. * International Review of Education *
Nelly P. Stromquist and Karen Monkman have revisited two decades of pedagogical and political debates about the dynamics of the global and the local in education to produce a thorough, lucid, and significant book. The editors assembled a diverse and highly qualified group of scholars that have contributed the most engaging, vivid, and in-depth discussions of key contemporary educational issues, ranging from models of understanding globalization to multiple forms of discrimination occurring in schools, and to ways of inquiring about global processes in different regions of the world. Globalization and Education is a treasure trove of the best research and wise thinking that should find its place in the toolbox of educators and scholars trying to understand how global and local dynamics are changing education in the 21st Century. -- Gustavo E. Fischman, professor, Arizona State University
The book presents noted scholars who share an actor-driven and network-based understanding of globalization. Rather than seeing globalization as an external, coercive force that turns national and local actors into passive recipients and implementers of international “standards” and “best practices,” the contributors disentangle the concept and analyze in fascinating ways what globalization means and does to educational development in different contexts and countries. -- Gita Steiner-Khamsi, professor, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York
I welcome the second edition of Globalization and Education: Integration and Contestation Across Cultures. Stromquist and Monkman put together a brilliant constellation of stars of comparative and international education. This book, written by 21 women and four men is full of ideas, concepts, and solid arguments that help us to better understand the dialectic between local cultures and globalization in its relation with educational systems. -- Carlos Ornelas, professor, Autonomous Metropolitan University, Mexico City
Table of ContentsPreface Abbreviations & Acronyms Part I. Conceptual and Methodological Issues 1.Defining Globalization and Assessing Its Implications, Revisted Nelly P. Stromquist and Karen Monkman 2.Globalization, Educational Change, and the National State Martin Carnoy 3.Globalization and Global Governance in Education Karen Mundy and Caroline Manion 4.The Productive Plasticity of Rights: Globalization, Education and Human Rights Monisha Bajaj 5.“The Girl Effect”: U.S. Transnational Corporate Investment in Girls' Education Kathryn Moeller 6.Globalization and Curriculum Inquiry: Performing Transnational Imaginaries Noel Gough 7.Globalization and the Social Construction of Reality: Affirming or Unmasking the “Inevitable”? Catherine A. Odora Hoppers 8.Studying Globalization: The Vertical Case Study Approach Lesley Bartlett and Frances Vavrus Part II. Globalization Impacts in Various Educational Sectors 9.Globalization Responses from European and Australian University Sectors Jan Currie and Lesley Vidovich 10.Globalization of the Community College Model: Paradox of the Local and the Global Revisited Rosalind Latiner Raby 11.Growing Up in the Great Recession: Revisiting the Restructuring of Gender, Schooling, and Work Peter Kelly and Jane Kenway 12.Globalization, Adult Education and Development Shirley Walters Part III. National Case Studies of Globalization Impacts 13.Globalization in Japan: Education Policy and Curriculum Lynne Parmenter 14.Global Encounters of the Universal and the Particular in Educational Policies in México 1988-2006 Rosa Nidia Buenfil 15.The Impacts of Globalization on Education in Malaysia Molly N. N. Lee 16.The Consequences of Global Mass Education: Schooling, Work and Well-being in EFA-era Malawi Nancy Kendall and Rachel Silver 17.Globalization and Education in Post-Apartheid South Africa: The Narrowing of Education’s Purpose Salim Vally and Carol Anne Spreen 18. “Still Hanging off the Edge”: An Australian Case Study of Gender, Universities and Globalization Jill Blackmore Contributors Index