29 research outputs found
Educational Voyaging in a Globalizing Planet: The Conference of the Rich, the Poor, and the Oppressed
This paper is an account of the author's experience of
aspects of globalization that are generally overlooked in market- and
statecentred discourses. She uses her personal experience of attending several
academic conferences as a way of analysing the relationship between the market,
struggle, politics, and identity. The paper also provides a critique of the
concept of "civil society" as a celebrated "space" of plurality and
resistance.Cet article fait u compte-rendu de l'experience vecue de
l'auteure sur les aspects de la mondialisation qui sont souvent ignores dans les
discours centres sur le marche et l'etat. Elle se sert de l'experience qu'elle a
acquise en assistant a plusieurs conferences academiques en tant que moyen
d'analyser la relation entre le marche, la lutte, la politique, et l'identite.
Cet article fait aussi une critique du concept de la "societe civile " comme un
"espace" de pluralite et de resistance celebre.
Learning by Dispossession: Gender, Imperialism and Adult Education
This is a Marxist-feminist theoretical study of ‘democracy training’ projects delivered among Iraqi women as part of ‘post-war reconstruction’ efforts of the US. This frame of analysis can assist us in dialectically understanding the ideological practice of these training projects and conceptualizing consciousness/praxis in order to explain adult education, gender, and imperialism
The Politics and Culture of "Honour Killing": The Murder of Fadime §ahindal
Rahmi Sahindal, a Kurdish man who migrated from Turkey to
Sweden in 1980, killed his daughter Fadime in the city of Uppsala on 21 January
2002. Rahmi and his son, Mesud, felt that Fadime had shamed the family by
rejecting an arranged marriage, and by feeling free to love a partner of her
choice, a Swedish man. She had, according to tradition, violated the codes of
honour "namus." She had further "shamed" her father and brother by resisting
their death threats, going public about their intentions, taking them to court,
and by launching a campaign against honour killing. Rahmi told the police that
he had to defend his (family's) honour by killing his daughter
The Struggle Over Lifelong Learning: A Marxist-Feminist Analysis
The concept of lifelong learning has become both an ideological distraction that shifts the burden of increasing adaptability to the worker, and a ray of hope for a more democratic and engaged citizenry. The purpose of this paper is to provide a Marxist-feminist analysis of the responses of the field of adult education to the concept of lifelong learning
The Rise and Fall of Socialist Adult Education in North America: Theorizing from the Literature
This paper provides a brief overview of literature on the rise and fall of early 20th century experiments in North American socialist adult education. Through a Marxist-Feminist theoretical framework, we examine and contrast the contributions of the folk school movement and the more explicitly socialist labour colleges to the broader field of adult education in Canada and the United States. We suggest that the demise of the socialist schools must be seen as a consequence of both internal philosophical and political struggles over the questions of gender and race, as well as the external forces of liberalism and state repression during the Cold War era
Immigrant Women and Labour Flexibility: Resisting Training through Learning
This research roundtable focuses on the lives and experiences of immigrant women in the context of the casualisation of labour and job deskilling. The presenters document the failure of training programs to challenge the ghettoisation of immigrant women in contingent and peripheral jobs and focus on the ways in which women learn to resist racialized and gendered exclusion in state approaches to training
State Violence, Learning and the Art of Memory
This paper examines the role that memory plays in the learning process of people who have experienced state violence. Our approach to this study has been a critical feminist-anti-racist perspective. Working with a group of women and men who are former political prisoners from Iran living in diaspora, we tried to interrogate questions about the role that memory plays in resistance and community building