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Joanna Leek – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2024
This paper seeks to extend discussion on teachers' leadership within International Baccalaureate schools in Poland. Background for the discussions on leadership in Polish context of education is the term Homo Sovieticus [in English: Soviet Man], a notion associated with sarcastic and critical reference to an average conformist person living in the…
Descriptors: Teacher Leadership, Educational Practices, International Schools, Foreign Countries
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Elena Aydarova – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
Drawing on the analysis of discursive shifts in the constructions of teachers' roles during the twentieth century in the Russian Federation, this paper argues that pedagogy becomes redefined based on the political elites' vision for the society's future. During the Soviet era, teachers were expected to play a key role in social transformation. In…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Educational History, Foreign Countries, Discourse Analysis
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Bregvadze, Tamar; Medjad, Karim – European Journal of Education, 2022
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the universities of the former Soviet states faced a lack of public funding that left them with tuition fees as their main--and sometimes only--source of revenue. In a context where universities were exclusively focused on their economic survival, the decision of Ilia State University (ISU) to introduce in…
Descriptors: Social Change, Social Systems, Doctoral Degrees, Doctoral Programs
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Goodson, Ivor; Mikser, Rain – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
Thirty years after the demise of the Soviet bloc, there still persists a rhetoric of differentiation and a discursive polarisation between the Western and the non-Western educational thinking and practices. This rhetoric overshadows a potential similarity, or homogeneity, between the dominant and several marginalised contexts. Regional, local and…
Descriptors: Social Change, Social Systems, Western Civilization, Educational Philosophy
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Chmielewski, Witold – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
The objective of this article is to present the creation of Junak schools after the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement was signed in London on 30 July 1941, when the Polish Army was formed in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. The problem has been examined from a historical perspective, in the current socio-political context, and, above all, in terms…
Descriptors: Educational History, Political Attitudes, Armed Forces, Educational Philosophy
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Oleksiyenko, Anatoly V. – Higher Education Quarterly, 2022
This paper explores integrity dilemmas experienced by Russian academics in the context of building a world-class university. Interviews with professors and managers of major research universities in Moscow provide critical insights into the organisational and attitudinal incongruities generated by a coercive state--a challenge that Russia has been…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Integrity, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes
Annalise Walkama – ProQuest LLC, 2024
This dissertation examines the expansion of refugee student services in postwar France during three subsequent refugee crises involving students from Eastern Europe. More than just a product of Franco-Soviet Cold War relations, I show how French support for the students developed in the context of decolonization and contemporary migration politics…
Descriptors: Refugees, Educational History, Social Systems, Authoritarianism
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Mitic, Radomir Ray – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2023
This mixed-methods ethnographic case study examines the socio-historical origins and current lived experiences of students at one Russian university to understand the role of a university education as an environmental factor in the development of a civic consciousness. Findings suggest that the institution has attempted to introduce liberal civic…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Citizenship Education, Social Responsibility, Social Systems
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Kobakhidze, M. Nutsa; Samniashvili, Lela – Higher Education Quarterly, 2022
In Georgia, the question of academic freedom emerged only after the country gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 and its universities could begin reckoning with a heavy past of ideological pressure, censorship, governmental control and top-down management. Despite official declarations of the right to academic freedom and its…
Descriptors: Social Systems, Social Change, Academic Freedom, Foreign Countries
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Shibanova, Ekaterina; Malinovskiy, Sergey – European Journal of Higher Education, 2021
This research explores the interrelations of higher education and welfare state models in the USSR of the 1960-1980s and Russia of the 2000-2020s. We first address the extent to which the provision of higher education aligns with the key imperatives of welfare redistribution: eligibility, state-market balance, and equality. Second, we schematize…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Social Systems, Social Change, Welfare Services
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Goca Memmedli, Gülnara – International Education Studies, 2021
When we talk about Meskhetian/Ahiskaian Turks, it is perceived that the Turkish community with a population of approximately 200 thousand existed in the Meskhetian/Samtskhe-Javakheti region of Georgia, who was exiled from their ancestral lands to the Central Asian countries in 1944 by the Soviet government. Due to its settled position, Ahiskaian…
Descriptors: Educational History, Authoritarianism, Ethnic Groups, Social Change
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Ahmad, Iftikhar – Journal of International Social Studies, 2019
The disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 was a major global historical event of the 20th century that permanently changed the destiny of hundreds of millions of people around the world. It was not a revolution. It was not a transition to democracy. It was not a struggle for decolonization. No one expected a world power like the Soviet Union…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Social Change, World History, Modern History
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Lovakov, Andrey; Yudkevich, Maria – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2021
We studied the population of articles on higher education published in academic journals by researchers from post-Soviet countries in the last three decades. We found that post-Soviet countries contribute differently to the overall publication output, with only Russia, Lithuania, and Estonia having more than 100 articles in journals indexed in…
Descriptors: Social Change, Social Systems, Journal Articles, Higher Education
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Oleksiyenko, Anatoly V. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2021
The legacy of totalitarianism thwarts discourse and practice of academic freedom in post-Soviet universities. For legacy-holders, "academic freedom" causes disorientation, irresponsibility, demoralization and inequity. They see more threats than benefits from empowering decision-makers who are non-compliant with local bureaucracy. For…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Universities, Decision Making, College Faculty
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Naudžiuniene, Akvile – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2020
In the 1960s Soviet regime in Lithuania introduced through education a concept of "a new man". This "new man" represented the idealistic vision of the Soviet citizen, thus he had to be indoctrinated with the specific set of values. History as a value-oriented discipline at schools, including both humanitarian and social…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Propaganda, Social Systems, Political Attitudes
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