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Zhao, Yali; Lin, Lin; Hoge, John D. – International Education Journal, 2007
More than any previous generation, today's students need to develop a global perspective and be knowledgeable about other nations in order to play a better role on the global stage. This paper first reviews some earlier and current studies on students' knowledge of the world, mainly conducted in the United States, and then it describes the global…
Descriptors: Global Education, International Relations, Foreign Countries, Surveys
Cowlishaw, Richard; Hunter, Charles; Coy, Jason; Tessmer, Michael – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2007
In this case study, groups of students represent countries as they negotiate an agreement to limit greenhouse-gas emissions. While initially developed for and used in an environmental-science course for first-year college students, the case could be applicable to other courses dealing with conflict resolution such as public policy, international…
Descriptors: Public Policy, International Relations, Conflict Resolution, College Freshmen
Reinalda, Bob – Journal of Political Science Education, 2008
This article deals with the Bologna Process (BP), which since its creation in 1999 has deeply influenced European higher education: What is it? How did it come into being? How far has it come? The BP is both a political phenomenon and a reform taking place in European higher education. As a political phenomenon it consists of a series of…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Higher Education, Governance, Quality Control
Sawchuk, Peter H.; Kempf, Arlo – Journal of Workplace Learning, 2008
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to contextualise historically transnational labour experiences within guest worker programs in Canada and to provide a conceptual foundation for analysing work, learning and living relations with special attention to agricultural workers. Design/methodology/approach: The research is based on a critical review…
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Agricultural Laborers, Foreign Countries, Foreign Workers
Pinn, Anthony B., Ed.; Levander, Caroline F., Ed.; Emerson, Michael O., Ed. – Palgrave Macmillan, 2010
Interdisciplinary work across the humanities and social sciences is moving beyond analysis of any one nation in isolation and instead placing urgent questions in the larger matrix of the Americas as a hemisphere. But little attention has been given to the overarching methodological, institutional, and pedagogical issues resulting from the growth…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, United States History, American Studies, Interdisciplinary Approach
Yagci, Yasemin – European Journal of Education, 2010
Since the beginning of the 20th century, integration with the Western world has been a determining driver of higher education policies, as well as many other policy areas in Turkey. Becoming a signatory country of the Bologna Process in 2001 brought a new impulse to the higher education policies in this direction. The Bologna Process reforms…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Governance, Government Role
Nelles, Wayne – Comparative Education, 2008
Little research has examined public diplomacy as a comparative education issue, particularly regarding social-psychological, economic and political fears or personal and national insecurities. This paper discusses American public diplomacy as a mostly Cold War strategy adapted to post-9/11 national security interests, fears and desires. It further…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, National Security, Comparative Education, War
Reimers, Fernando – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
According to a recent report of scenarios prepared by the National Intelligence Council, the next 15 years will bring significant global changes, including the transformation of the international political system built after World War II, a transfer of wealth from the West to the East, pressure on natural resources resulting from continuing…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Social Change, Economic Progress, Natural Resources
Moore, James R. – Social Studies, 2008
Population trends--birth and death rates, immigration patterns, sex ratios, and life expectancies--are one of the most important issues facing the international community. These trends' relationship to the world economy, the environment, and developing countries' ability to meet the needs of growing populations is a topic appropriate for the…
Descriptors: Population Education, Global Education, Population Trends, Numbers
Payne, Brandyn L. – Peabody Journal of Education, 2008
The role of education in fostering economic growth and social development is universally recognized. Although history places the provision of education firmly within national control, countries increasingly search outside national borders for alternative distribution frameworks. Tellingly, the World Trade Organization recently included education…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, International Trade, Role of Education, Social Development
Allison, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2007
This article will examine Canadian politicians' and administrators' leadership in the realm of education-related international activities. In the era between the 1960s and the 1980s, it became increasingly difficult for educational leaders to walk the line dividing federal and provincial responsibility in this field. Educational authorities at the…
Descriptors: Federal State Relationship, Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Politics of Education
Gibler, Douglas M. – Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2008
Reputations are supposed to matter. Decision makers consistently refer to reputations for resolve, and international relations theories confirm the value of being able to credibly signal intentions during times of crisis. However, empirical support for the effects of reputation has been lacking. Problems of strategic selection have hampered…
Descriptors: Reputation, International Relations, Values, Behavior Problems
Addi-Raccah, Audrey; Arviv-Elyashiv, Rinate – Urban Education, 2008
School decentralization, which has reshaped power relations in the educational system, has empowered teachers and parents. Taking Abbott's approach to professions, the authors examine teachers' perceptions of the implications of parents' empowerment for teacher--parent relations. In-depth interviews with homeroom teachers in affluent urban…
Descriptors: School Restructuring, Parent Participation, International Relations, Teaching Skills
Bigelow, Bill – Educational Leadership, 2007
As a high school social studies teacher, the author provides his students with a curriculum that helps them think about immigration issues. He describes the instructional units that he has developed to address two key questions about U.S.-Mexican immigration: What is the origin of the U.S.-Mexico border? and Why are so many people today fleeing…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigration, Social Studies, International Relations
Bussmann, Margit; Oneal, John R. – Journal of Conflict Resolution, 2007
According to power-transition theory, war is most likely when the leading state is challenged by a rapidly growing, dissatisfied rival. Challengers are said to be dissatisfied because the hegemon manages the status quo for its own benefit, rewarding its allies and penalizing rivals. We assess the leading state's ability to distribute the private…
Descriptors: International Relations, Power Structure, Peace, Leadership