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Stachowiak-Kudla, Monika – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2021
The application of academic freedom may lead to a violation of individual rights, such as the right to respect private life or institutional rights such as university autonomy, or the right of the religious community to self-determination. These collisions between rights are resolved by constitutional courts either according to the proportionality…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Academic Freedom, Civil Rights, Court Litigation
Adick, Christel – International Review of Education, 2021
This article highlights the stipulation of the provision of formal schooling in a regional constitution drafted in West Africa in 1871, almost 150 years ago. The constitution under discussion originated in Fanteland, a coastal region of the Gold Coast (modern-day southern Ghana), and was the main achievement of a historical movement which sought…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Constitutional Law, Educational History, Civil Rights
Preston Green; Bruce Baker; Suzanne Eckes – Peabody Journal of Education, 2024
Between 2017 and 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court examined three cases that involved states that tried to limit the use of public money to support religious-affiliated schools. The Supreme Court found a violation of the Free Exercise Clause in all three cases. Although not the focus of the Court's opinions, these cases may have created avenues for…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, Religion, Court Litigation, Racism
Black, Derek W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2021
In a time when both American democracy and U.S. public schools appear to be in crisis, Derek Black argues that the best way forward is to look to the past at the ideals that the founding fathers espoused in the early years of the nation. Although early U.S. leaders placed a priority on expanding public education, Black explains that these ideals…
Descriptors: Democracy, Democratic Values, United States History, Public Education
Chitsamatanga, Bellita Banda; Ntlama-Makhanya, Nomthandazo – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2022
The right to basic education of a child is a requirement of human dignity. South Africa, through its new dispensation and conformity with human rights laws, is expected to transform and be consistent with the provision of the Constitution of 1996 that promotes and protects the best interest of the child. However, the current standards in a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Civil Rights, Student Rights, Access to Education
van der Walt, Johannes; Oosthuizen, Izak – Perspectives in Education, 2021
The indigenous sub-Saharan African philosophy of "ubuntu" that comes down to the expression: "I am a human being because of being with other human beings", developed over centuries. This philosophy, embodying the notion of deep respect for all human beings, is rooted in a humane inclination towards kindness and sound…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Altruism, Human Dignity
Treskov, Aleksej P.; Markhgeym, Marina V.; Matyusheva, Tatiana N.; Mikhaleva, Galina G.; Tkhabisimova, Lyudmila A. – Journal of Educational Psychology - Propositos y Representaciones, 2020
The study subject in this article is aims to educate the concepts of judiciary principles in Eastern eroup. We substantiated the conclusion on constitutional structuring of the formalization of judiciary principles in the sections devoted to the state foundations (constitutional system); human and civil rights and freedoms; judiciary; higher…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Court Litigation, Constitutional Law, Civil Rights
Roelf Petrus Reyneke – Education as Change, 2024
Section 28(1)(c) of the South African Constitution (1996) unequivocally affirms that children are the only vulnerable group with an explicit right to social services. Nonetheless, the practical realisation of this right remains elusive for many children, leaving them without access to vital social services. Through the theoretical framework of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Services, Childrens Rights, Advocacy
Potter, Lee Ann – Social Education, 2020
A classroom examination of the featured historical article announcing North Carolina's ratification of the Constitution can springboard into a lesson on federalism, the Bill of Rights, and the ratification process.
Descriptors: State History, Newspapers, History Instruction, Constitutional Law
Sdunzik, Jennifer; Johnson, Chrystal S. – Social Education, 2020
After a 72-year struggle, the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution granted American women the right to vote in 1920. Coupled with the Fifteenth Amendment, which extended voting rights to African American men, the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment transformed the power and potency of the American electorate. This article invites the…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, Civil Rights, Voting, Females
Suping, Shen; Zijian, Chen – Chinese Education & Society, 2019
With respect to the rights and duties of citizens to receive an education, as provided under the Constitution and the Education Law of China, academic circles have proposed three interpretations: the combined right and duty viewpoint, the right viewpoint, and the duty viewpoint. Through analysis of the course of the emergence, development, and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Compulsory Education, Civil Rights, Constitutional Law
Crocco, Margaret Smith – Social Education, 2020
This 2020 issue of "Social Education," marking the centennial anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment, seeks to broaden understanding of the suffrage story in several ways: by considering the strategies and tactics used by the suffragists to foment their agitation; by acknowledging the ways in which further work was needed to secure…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, Voting, Females, Feminism
La Noue, George R. – Academic Questions, 2021
The problem is the widespread practice by many campuses in defining community membership in ways that deny their students the civil liberties and civil rights all other Americans are guaranteed. Thus, when forty-year old veterans enroll for even one part-time course, they may find that First and Fourteenth Amendment rights existing off campus no…
Descriptors: College Students, College Environment, Civil Rights, Academic Freedom
Porter, Corinne; Munn, Kathleen – Social Education, 2019
The nationwide commemoration in 2020 of the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment is an opportunity to explore not only women's long struggle to achieve this landmark moment, but also to engage in an exploration of women's civic engagement during the woman suffrage movement. The terms "woman suffrage" and "suffragist" often…
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, United States History, Females, Civil Rights
Hadpagdee, Saward; Choutikavatchagul, Songphon; Mason, Chairat; Aranyawat, Suttipun; Hngokchai, Phra Wasan; Singtong, Phramaha Komkai; Ruangsan, Niraj – Online Submission, 2021
This research aimed: (1) to study the political participation of the monk and novice students in MCUKK as the guideline to develop the political participation instruction for MCUKK students; and (2) to suggest the ways to promote the political participation instruction of the monk and novice students. The population of the research was the…
Descriptors: Buddhism, Clergy, Novices, Undergraduate Students