Book Chapter

Towards Glocal Pedagogies: Some Risks Associated with Education for Global Citizenship and How Glocal Pedagogies Might Avoid Them

Details

Citation

Mannion G (2015) Towards Glocal Pedagogies: Some Risks Associated with Education for Global Citizenship and How Glocal Pedagogies Might Avoid Them. In: Friedman J, Haverkate V, Oomen B, Park E & Sklad M (eds.) Going Glocal in Higher Education: the theory, teaching and measurement of global citizenship. Middelburg, The Netherlands: University College Roosevelt, pp. 19-34.

Abstract
In this chapter, I outline what a pedagogical orientation to the ‘glocal’ might comprise and afford. I argue that ‘going glocal’ in our pedagogies will mean never losing touch with the local when responding to transnational forces; going glocal means taking local settings, concerns and practices as connected to extra-local ones. Going glocal helps us comprehend and respond to the lived realities of transnational forces. This can help with ameliorating and potentially overcoming some of the risks and critiques associated with weaker formulations of ‘education for global citizenship’. Glocal pedagogies can enable us to address ecological and social justice, and produce viable knowledge and practices within a reframed education for global citizenship.

Keywords
global citizenship; glocal; pedagogy; local; global; sustainability; Earth

StatusPublished
FundersScottish Centre for Intergenerational Practice and The Primary Science Teaching Trust
Publication date31/12/2015
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/22926
PublisherUniversity College Roosevelt
Place of publicationMiddelburg, The Netherlands
ISBN978-94-92170-10-1

People (1)

People

Professor Gregory Mannion

Professor Gregory Mannion

Professor, Education

Projects (2)