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| Jim Crowther, Ian Martin, Mae Shaw
(eds.) ISBN 1 86201 041 2 1999
More titles on
Community Dev't/N'hood renewal |
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Like many other societies Scotland is facing choices in striking the balance between market and democratic definitions of citizenship, competition and co-operation, difference and solidarity, rights and responsibilities. The outcome of these choices remains open and undecided – and the prospects for human well-being deeply ambivalent. Can Scotland today pose the threat of a good example?
This book is concerned with the role of adult education as an agent of progressive social and political change. Although focused on Scotland, the book is written for a wider audience and makes a distinctive contribution to the debate about the meaning and purpose of radical adult education in the contemporary world.
After examining the relationship between popular education and social change, there are historical accounts of the Socialist Sunday School movement, of women’s’ struggles in and out of the Dundee jute industry, and of the experience of the Muslim community in Scotland. Other chapters cover the struggle of the disability movement for inclusion, the campaigns of the Assynt Crofters and the islanders of Eigg for self-determination, the fight for gender equality in the Scottish Parliament, and the potential contribution of trade union education, environmental politics and cultural action for the process of democratic renewal.
This book will be of interest to academics, students, trainers and practitioners in adult and community education and all those committed to radical adult education.
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‘….the editors should be congratulated for providing such a multiplicity of
perspectives and sophisticated theoretical analyses.’
(Convergence)
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| Foreword | Colin Kirkwood | |
| Chapter 1. | Introductory essay: popular education and social movements in Scotland today | Ian Martin |
| Section 1. | Theorising popular education and social movements | |
| Chapter 2. | Popular education and the struggle for democracy | Jim Crowther |
| Chapter 3. | Social movements and the politics of educational change | Lindsay Paterson |
| Chapter 4. | Learning from popular education in Latin America | Liam Kane |
| Chapter 5. | Women, adult education and really useful knowledge | Jean Barr |
| Chapter 6. | The significance of the Scottish generalist tradition | Murdo Macdonald |
| Section 2. | Historical perspectives | |
| Chapter 7. | With 'real feeling and just sense': rehistoricising popular education | Tom Steele |
| Chapter 8. | A critical history of the Workers' Educational Association in Scotland, 1905-1993 | Robert Duncan |
| Chapter 9. | Muslims in Scotland: challenging Islamophobia | Elinor Kelly and Bashir Maan |
| Chapter 10. | 'A band of little comrades': Socialist Sunday Schools in Scotland | David Fisher |
| Chapter 11. | Defiant sisters: exploited workers | Sue Mansfield |
| Section 3. | Social and cultural action | |
| Chapter 12. | The disability movement and the struggle for inclusion | Margaret Petrie and Mae Shaw |
| Chapter 13. | 'History, justice and the law': the struggle of the Assynt Crofters | Isobel MacPhail |
| Chapter 14. | Not on the curriculum: the story of Scottish working class material culture | Elspeth King |
| Chapter 15. | Representing women: the tactics of gender in Scotland | Alice Brown |
| Chapter 16. | Liberation theology in Scottish community empowerment | Alastair McIntosh |
| Chapter 17. | Workers as citizens: trade union education in the new Scotland | Mick McGrath |
| Chapter 18. | Building a pedagogy of hope: the experience of the Adult Learning Project | Vernon Galloway |
| Chapter 19. | Cultivating knowledge: education, the environment and conflict | Eurig Scandrett |
| Section 4 | Struggles in practice | |
| Chapter 20. | Making connections: learning through struggle | Helen Martin and Cathy McCormack |
| Chapter 21. | Neighbourhood as classroom: reflections of an activist | John Dickie |
| Chapter 22. | Past matters: memories and histories | Lorraine Dick |
| Chapter 23. | Making racism visible: an agenda for an anti-racist Scotland | Rowena Arshad |
| Chapter 24. | Instrumental objectives and liberal values: squaring the circle | Margaret Beveridge |
| Chapter 25. | Equal opportunities: back to basics | Jane Meagher |
| List of Contributors | ||
| Index |
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