Citizen Identity Formation of Domestic Students and Syrian Refugee Youth in Jordan

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A01=Patricia K. Kubow
Afternoon Shift
Arab Barometer survey
Arab Female
Arab Islamic Identity
Arab-Islamic ontologies
Arabic Language
Author_Patricia K. Kubow
Category=JBFG
Category=JPVC
Citizen identity
Citizen Identity Formation
Citizenship education
Civic Education
comparative education
Double Shift System
Double-shift schools
educational policy analysis
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
forced migration studies
Greater Middle East
IEA Civic Education Study
Institutional Review Board
IRB
Jordan
Jordanian
Jordanian Girls
Jordanian Identity
Jordanian Male
Jordanian National Identity
Jordanian Nationalism
Jordanian Students
Jordanian Youth
King Abdullah II
MENA
Middle East and North Africa
Middle East social integration
Muslim societies
Ontology
Philosophical inquiry
Pupil voice
qualitative research methods
Refugee education
refugee student identity development
Social ontologies
Syrian Boys
Syrian Girls
Syrian Refugee
Syrian refugee crisis
Syrian Students
youth civic engagement
Youth identities

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367697839
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Moving beyond Western philosophical and political frameworks, this text engages with and centers Arab-Islamic ontologies, pupil voice, and gender to explore citizen identity formation and belonging among domestic students and Syrian refugees in Jordan.

Focusing on the role of double-shift schools, educational policy, and provision, the volume interrogates how citizenship and youth identity is rooted, upheld, and altered over time. With an eye to complex historical, local, and national contexts of migration and (in)security in the Middle East, the book strives for a reconceptualization of citizen identity and education to better reflect the development of socio-civic identities amidst poverty, forced migration, and unrest. Based on direct access to 10 public schools in Jordan and using qualitative data, it applies an innovative combination of different methods to ascertain student voice to theorize education for citizenship based on real and challenging experiences of Syrian refugees as well as domestic Jordanian students. Moving beyond the traditional Western philosophies that largely frame citizenship discourses, it applies process philosophy to a field dominated by political considerations while also paying attention to social contexts. As such, it goes beyond the context of Jordan to inform regional and international discourses, policies, and initiatives surrounding refugees and education in emergencies.

The book will appeal to scholars, professionals, and students in the fields of comparative and international education, citizenship youth studies, social studies, and social foundations of education, as well as those working in the formal and non-formal educational development sectors.

Patricia K. Kubow is Professor of International and Comparative Education in Educational Leadership and Policy Studies and Curriculum and Instruction at Indiana University, USA.

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