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Hayfa Jafar – Higher Education Policy, 2024
The US-led invasion in 2003 created opportunities for Iraq to establish American-style universities. Drawing on policy borrowing and educational transfer theory and using interviews as the primary method of data collection, this study examines how the American-style universities are rationalized and appropriated by various actors at national,…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Foreign Countries, Access to Education, International Relations
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Jafar, Hayfa; Sabzalieva, Emma – Journal of Comparative and International Higher Education, 2022
As Iraq and Tajikistan recover from the impact of conflict and international isolation, spaces are being created for higher education to internationalize by opening up and (re)connecting with the international academic community. Drawing on 25 field-based interviews, this article examines how academics in these two countries interpret these…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Conflict Resolution, War
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Girling, Kristian – International Studies in Catholic Education, 2016
This article will consider the significant role which the Society of Jesus had played in the Iraqi secondary and higher education systems in the period 1932-1968. The Jesuits' Baghdad-based school and university formed a part of the substantial Jesuit educational network established across the Middle East from the nineteenth century and this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Catholics, Religious Cultural Groups, Church Role
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Thompson, Doug – Journal of College Admission, 2012
This article presents the author's response to "Surviving the War: A College Counselor's Journal" by Philip Clinton. He argues that Clinton's engrossing account of the 1990-91 school year at Cairo American College (CAC) gives individuals wonderful insights into the unusual challenges occasionally encountered by an international…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Counselors, Educational Counseling, Social Influences
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Gonzalez-Bailon, Sandra; Banchs, Rafael E.; Kaltenbrunner, Andreas – Human Communication Research, 2012
This article examines how emotional reactions to political events shape public opinion. We analyze political discussions in which people voluntarily engage online to approximate the public agenda: Online discussions offer a natural approach to the salience of political issues and the means to analyze emotional reactions as political events take…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Opinions, Elections, Agenda Setting
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Ment, David M. – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2011
In a significant 1925 essay, "Western Education in Moslem Lands", Paul Monroe addressed the emerging cultural and political forces faced by American educators in the Middle East. Monroe was widely recognised at the time as editor of the Cyclopedia of Education and director of the International Institute of Teachers College, Columbia…
Descriptors: Muslims, Foreign Countries, Cultural Influences, Role
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Blankemeyer, Maureen; Walker, Kathleen; Svitak, Erika – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 2009
This research incorporated an ecological approach to examine American and Northern Irish children's understanding of the 2003 war in Iraq and the sources of information from which they acquired that understanding. Responses to interviews indicated that the children from the two countries had some common conceptions of and sources of information…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, War, Children, Concept Formation
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Walgrave, Stefaan; Verhulst, Joris – Social Forces, 2009
This study tackles the question to what extent the composition of protest events is determined by the stance of governments. Established contextual theories do not formulate propositions on how context affects individual protesters. The article engages in empirically testing whether the macro-context affects the internal diversity of the crowds…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, War
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Vongalis-Macrow, Athena – Journal of Peace Education, 2006
Non-government organisations (NGOs) are playing an increasingly significant role in post-conflict situations as donor funding pours into rebuilding programs. Donor funding supports the development of a range of humanitarian and civic programs such as peace restoration, civic reconstruction and peace-keeping. This article is a case study of the…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Donors, Conflict, Educational Practices
Zehr, Mary Ann – Education Week, 2006
This article discusses the withdrawal of the United States government from educational reform in Iraq. It has however, through the U.S. Agency for International Development, awarded a two-year National Capacity Development contract, which is aimed at helping Iraq's government ministries to function better. This article discusses how security…
Descriptors: Educational Facilities Improvement, Foreign Countries, Grants, Educational Change
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Iannone, Carol – Academic Questions, 2006
Our editor-at-large puts questions to a political scientist--the former higher-education advisor to the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq--who replies with skepticism about prospects for our efforts to restore a university system in Iraq and reconstitute that troubled society in our image. Building an informed democracy, John Agresto…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Social Change, Futures (of Society)
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Dalton, Robert – Canadian Review of Art Education: Research and Issues, 1997
Criticizes the growing practice of using children's art in the service of political causes. Discusses a recent exhibit that included Iraqi children's art in support of the Intifada and in condemnation of Israel. Questions the ethics of this for art educators and its effectiveness as political persuasion. (MJP)
Descriptors: Agenda Setting, Art Education, Audience Response, Bias