1 / 13

Global Development Education – a Central and Eastern European perspective

Global Development Education – a Central and Eastern European perspective. CONCORD/HAND Janos Setenyi setenyi@ expanzio.hu Budapest 2006.03.23. Short overview. Central European paradoxes Lessons of civic education in the region The emerging way of development education in CEE

rolf
Download Presentation

Global Development Education – a Central and Eastern European perspective

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Global Development Education – a Central and Eastern European perspective CONCORD/HAND Janos Setenyi setenyi@expanzio.hu Budapest 2006.03.23.

  2. Short overview • Central European paradoxes • Lessons of civic education in the region • The emerging way of development education in CEE • Areas to be developed

  3. Some Central European paradoxes • Duetothetotalitarianexperience, victimidentity • No colonialpast, nosense of being guilty • Landlockedsmallcountries, no globalperspective • Decliningdemography, ageingsocieties • Overall scepticismaboutaid and intervention • Weakmiddle-classwith a nationalperspective • Weaktradition of volunteerism and charity • Weakciviceducation

  4. ……but at the same time • Between 1989 and 2009 CEE has made a breath-taking social and economic progress • Some countries (like Hungary) have become the most globalized economies in the world • 10 countries joined the EU and the world has been opened up for them (labour-market, communication, information) • Flourishing NGO-sector in most countries

  5. Growingrichbutstill feeling like a victimPPP per capita, 2005, IMF

  6. No progresswithoutlinkages: thepyramid of identities

  7. The experience of civiceducationin CEE • School based learning • Supermarket approach • Global contents • Skills and competences • Technical • Social learning • Full-fledged citizenship education • Traditions and global frames combined • Ideas, values, contents • Cognitive and emotional

  8. The emergingway of developmenteducationin CEE I. • Human rightseducation • Environmentalprotection, sustainabledevelopment • Interculturaleducation • Fair trade • Humanitarianissues • Socialdialogue • Gendereducation

  9. The emerging way of development education in CEE II. • Modest ministerial support: no perceived national interests • School system: cross-curricular topics, curricular decentralization (H, PL, SL), county level inspectorates (RO) • Lack of training materials, • Active NGO-sector: small projects, trainings, campaigns, advocacy • Adult education: an untapped potential

  10. The emergingway of developmenteducationin CEE III. • Weak social integration • Supermarket approach ruling • No full-fledged global citizenship • Great dose of idealism • Strong cognitive and emotional content, few practical issues (cases, participation) • No reflexion to the power dimension of globalization

  11. Will China save Africa?

  12. Global education is aboutglobaldemocracy

  13. Areas to be developed • Understanding global power relations (markets, value-chains, information, media, finance, oligarchies) • The existing global regulations (UN, WTO) • The European model of globalization • The future role of the global civil society • Checks and balances in a global society

More Related