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Showing 1 to 15 of 31 results Save | Export
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Maggie O'Neill – Ethics and Education, 2025
While education is often tasked with educating students for a somewhat infinite number of futures, it is perhaps possible to say that no matter what the future is, people will continue to live with and care for one another in some capacity. To be attentive to this future is not to educate for a specific, fully developed and already decided upon…
Descriptors: Restorative Practices, Justice, Violence, Caring
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Strand, Torill – Ethics and Education, 2022
The metaphor of 'viral modernity' denotes an era characterized by communal experiences of how viruses, be they in the shape of physical, virtual or symbolic forms, permeate and shape social and cultural life. To think educative justice in viral modernity thus require a radical move beyond the surfaces of conventional paradigms in order to reach at…
Descriptors: Justice, Educational Philosophy, Models, COVID-19
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Kai Horsthemke – Ethics and Education, 2025
The latest buzz word within the intersecting terrain of postcolonial pedagogy and social and applied epistemology seems to be the notion of 'reparation' -- or, to be more precise, reparation pertaining to past and ongoing epistemic injustice and harm. Reparations are frequently taken to involve decolonisation of both education and knowledge. The…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Postcolonialism, Instruction, Justice
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Hogstad, Kjetil Horn – Ethics and Education, 2022
Education appears to bear responsibility on the one hand to do justice to society's need for reproduction and continuation, and on the other to do justice to the individual's capacity for and need to express resistance, critique and political action. How we navigate this problem is tied to how we understand justice. 'Plastic justice' is the…
Descriptors: Justice, Educational Philosophy, Selection, Social Influences
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Bostad, Inga – Ethics and Education, 2022
I here explore how an ethics of rhythm can shed light on what promotes and inhibits recognition between people across our vulnerable lives, and the need for a renewal of the philosophy of pedagogy. I argue that philosophy itself has contributed to a certain oblivion regarding how we follow and create rhythmic societies, the need for a more…
Descriptors: Ethics, Repetition, Recognition (Psychology), Educational Philosophy
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Ethics and Education, 2022
This article examines some aspects of the entanglement between aesthetic injustice and epistemic injustice, paying special attention to how aesthetic injustice can be resisted in the classroom. The article brings into conversation Boal's notion of aesthetic injustice with Rancière's work on the overlapping of aesthetics and politics to suggest…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Epistemology, Justice, Politics of Education
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Pérez Guerrero, Javier – Ethics and Education, 2022
This study sets out the main points in Leonardo Polo's theory of moral development, which systematically articulates goods, norms, and virtues. To make them easier to understand, each point has been compared with Kohlberg's theory of moral development, which is well known to specialists and radically different to it. We have chosen three aspects…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Moral Development, Freedom, Ethics
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Lie, Elin Rodahl – Ethics and Education, 2022
With a specific example from Norway and inspiration from Sara Ahmed's The Promise of Happiness, this article demonstrates how today's educational rhetoric lacks the language and will to recognise a key pedagogical dimension in education: what happens when the normative ambitions of education and students meet. At best, teaching students life…
Descriptors: Justice, Psychological Patterns, Outcomes of Education, Educational Philosophy
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Chang, David – Ethics and Education, 2021
The rapid increase in human population is one of the underlying factors driving the ecological crisis. Despite efforts on the part of educators to raise awareness of environmental issues, the ecological impact of a burgeoning population -- and the ethical implications of having children -- remains an unbroachable topic. Nevertheless, the increase…
Descriptors: Overpopulation, Ethics, Ecology, Family Planning
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Peter Manning; Julia Paulson – Ethics and Education, 2024
This article reflects on tensions arising in multiple perspectives approaches as they are deployed in response to histories of atrocity and conflict. We call attention to the ways that multiple perspectives intersect with the challenges posed by competing memories of violence and questions of responsibility. Focusing on a peace education programme…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Peace, History Instruction, Death
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Alvaro, Carlo – Ethics and Education, 2020
Marcus William Hunt argues that when co-parents disagree over whether to raise their child (or children) as a vegan, they should reach a compromise as a gift given by one parent to the other out of respect for his or her authority. Josh Millburn contends that Hunt's proposal of parental compromise over veganism is unacceptable on the ground that…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Food, Eating Habits, Parents
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Hunt, Marcus William – Ethics and Education, 2021
Co-parents who differ in their ideal child rearing policies should compromise, argues Marcus William Hunt. Josh Milburn and Carlo Alvaro dispute this when it comes to veganism. Milburn argues that veganism is a matter of justice and that to compromise over justice is (typically) impermissible. I suggest that compromise over justice is often…
Descriptors: Ethics, Parent Child Relationship, Food, Eating Habits
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Pedersen, Helena – Ethics and Education, 2021
Deborah Britzman's remarkable question, 'What holds education back?', appears more urgent than ever in a world of accelerating environmental crises, climate change, and what has been described as "omnicide" -- the annihilation of everything. What, then, holds education back from initiating radical change under these urgent conditions?…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Psychiatry, Ethics, Climate
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Zembylas, Michalinos – Ethics and Education, 2015
This essay considers the ethical implications of engaging in a pedagogy of discomfort, using as a point of departure Butler's reflections on ethical violence and norms. The author shows how this attempt is full of tensions that cannot, if ever, be easily resolved. To address these tensions, the author first offers a brief overview of the notion of…
Descriptors: Justice, Social Justice, Violence, Teaching Methods
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Gilliam, Cortland – Ethics and Education, 2021
Black, Indigenous and otherwise minoritized communities of color are amongst the most vulnerable to the adverse consequences of environmental crises and the solutions proposed to remedy them. The participation and subsequent erasure of non-White youth activists and organizers within environmental sustainability struggles, and their subsequent…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Conservation (Environment), Ethics, Sustainability
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