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Willems, Jurgen – Educational Researcher, 2021
Civil courage refers to the behavior where people actively intervene to protect a victim in a concrete situation of injustice despite the risk of becoming a victim themselves. To act with civil courage, one requires competencies that relate to prosocial values as well as the physical and social ability to act. In this context, this brief reports…
Descriptors: Intervention, Justice, Victims, Prosocial Behavior
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Martín-Solbes, Victor Manuel; Añaños, Fanny T.; Molina-Fernández, Elvira; Burgos-Jiménez, Rubén J. – Education Sciences, 2021
Background: The article addresses the reality of prison professionals in ordinary and open prison conditions, which includes the perceptions of women prisoners, due to their low institutional presence that limits their reintegration, from a socio-educational perspective. The aim is to analyse psycho-emotional, educational, and work-related…
Descriptors: Correctional Institutions, Females, Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Education
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Wasonga, Teresa A.; Makahamadze, Tompson – European Journal of Educational Management, 2020
Goffman's theory of total institutions and Fanon's theory of violence were used to explain student protests and violence in Kenyan secondary schools. Youth violence around the world is not a new phenomenon. However, the persistence, frequency, and intensity of violence, and their consequences beg for logical explanations and remedies. This study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, School Violence, Activism, Student Attitudes
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Schryer, Catherine; McDougall, Allan; Tait, Glendon R.; Lingard, Lorelei – Written Communication, 2012
This article investigates an emerging practice in palliative care: dignity therapy. Dignity therapy is a psychotherapeutic intervention that its proponents assert has clinically significant positive impacts on dying patients. Dignity therapy consists of a physician asking a patient a set of questions about his or her life and returning to the…
Descriptors: Hospitals, Death, Patients, Ecology
Murithi, Tim – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2007
Some African leaders have made the argument that the promotion of an international human rights standard is a strategy that is used and abused by hypocritical Western governments to justify their intervention into the affairs of African countries. The tacit objective behind this articulation is the desire to avoid an external evaluation or…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Human Dignity, Foreign Countries, Intervention