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Leaning Into Politics -

Leaning Into Politics

Higher Educationand the Democracy We Need
Buch | Softcover
380 Seiten
2024
Information Age Publishing (Verlag)
979-8-88730-700-8 (ISBN)
CHF 84,90 inkl. MwSt
This book addresses the decline in democracy and confidence in political institutions, highlighting the role of higher education in promoting civic engagement. It examines challenges like voting restrictions, hyperpartisanship, and scrutiny of how colleges educate on public issues.
Democratic decline in the United States and globally, a lack of confidence in political institutions and an increasingly violent and divisive political climate raise many questions for the state of political learning and civic engagement. A decade ago, a task force commissioned by the United States Department of Education called on colleges and universities to affirm their missions to educate for democracy. Relatively few have made the investment, though dozens of higher education associations and organizations have publicly committed their support to prepare students to address the persistent public issues they are inheriting.

While there has been a recent upward spike in rote civic knowledge and historically high youth voting rates, the United States has seen a decline in political rights and civil liberties and has been listed as a backsliding democracy. Since 2010, state legislatures have passed laws making it harder to vote, with access to the ballot increasingly dependent on which party controls the state legislature. Meanwhile, substantial dysfunction and hyperpartisanship in Congress, concerns over the impartiality of the judiciary and limited accountability and oversight of the executive branch have contributed to the loss of institutional capacity to address public problems and to declining public confidence in political institutions.

These trends coincide with problematic rhetoric and growing scrutiny from public officials on how colleges and universities educate students on public issues, particularly those centered on class, race, ethnicity and social justice. Issues of free speech and expression have been further nationalized following a high-profile hearing of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce that questioned the presidents of Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and University of Pennsylvania about antisemitism on their campuses and as campus protests regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict have been met with heavy-handed responses. These episodes serve as loud warning shots to colleges and universities across the country. Academic freedom and freedom of speech - core tenets of a liberal education - are at risk. Can higher education step up and meet the moment? Collectively, contributors to this volume - who come from a broad range of institutions, experiences and perspectives - provide critical research and analyses, as well as innovative approaches for how higher education can fulfill its public role and contribute to building the democratic societies we need.

Acknowledgements.

Chapter 1. Building the Democracy We Need: How Can Higher Education Meet the Moment? Abraham Goldberg and Carah Ong Whaley.

Section I: Naming And Framing: Challenges And Pathways For Higher Education's Necessary Role In Strengthening Democracy.

Chapter 2. Authoritarianism and the University: Global Perspectives From the Last Century; Lauren L. Shepherd.

Chapter 3. Caught in the Middle: (In)Civility, Compliance, and Norms of Appropriateness; Angela Kraemer-Holland.

Chapter 4. Leaning Into Institutional Politics: Paradoxes of Success in Higher Education Civic Learning and Democratic Engagement Initiatives; Caroline W. Lee.

Chapter 5. Focusing on How Not Why: Examining the Role of Nonprofit Partner Organizations in Campus-Based Civic Engagement Programming; Allison D. Rank.

Chapter 6. Bridging the Complexities of Higher Education and Philanthropy; Teresa Taylor.

Section II: Building Institutional And Administrative Capacity For Political Learning And Democratic Engagement.

Chapter 7. Fostering Campus Cultures That are ALL IN for Nonpartisan Democratic Engagement; Stephanie King and Jennifer Domagal-Goldman.

Chapter 8. How America's Community Colleges Support Democracy; Belinda S. Miles, George Keteku, Tiago Machado, Glenetta Phillips, and Rinardo Reddick.

Chapter 9. Embracing the Politics of the Possible: Voter Engagement at an R1 Institution; Karen M. Kedrowski.

Chapter 10. Who's in the Room When It Happens? Use of Data Driven Analysis and Power Mapping to Build an Inclusive Political Engagement Coalition; Leah A. Murray.

Chapter 11. Opening the Pod Doors: The Public Intellectual in an Age of Democratic Decline; Saladin Ambar.

Section III: Strengthening Student Voice And Enhancing Civic Skills And Dispositions.

Chapter 12. Developing Empowered Citizens: How Universities Help Build Efficacy; Laurie L. Rice and Kenneth Moffett.

Chapter 13. Political Socialization in Campus Life: Can Student Organizations Replicate Civic Learning in Tocqueville's Voluntary Associations? J. Cherie Strachan, Michael R. Wolf, and Elizabeth A. Bennion.

Chapter 14. Fostering Civic Resilience: A Framework for Campus Misinformation Reduction; Ryan W. Flynn and Elora A. Agsten.

Chapter 15. Indoctrination; Education, and Deliberative Democracy: A DEI Case Study, David Moshman.

Chapter 16. The Proximate Power of Student-Led Nonpartisan Political Engagement Efforts; Alexander S. Kappus.

Chapter 17. Space, Place, and Community: Engaging With College Students Where They Are; Brian F. Harrison and Robert Healy.

Section IV: Charting Courses: Creating Classrooms That Prepare Students For Democracy.

Chapter 18. Teaching and Modeling Democracy in the Classroom During Political Polarization: The Amalgamation Pedagogy Project; Mark K. McBeth and Donna L. Lybecker.

Chapter 19. Moving Fast Without Breaking Democracy: Computer Science Education for a Just Future; Julie M. Smith.

Chapter 20. Forced Migration; Civic Engagement, and Educational Exchange in the Time of COVID-19, Prakash Adhikari.

Chapter 21. Poetry at the End of Democracy: Envisioning Democracy Through Poetry; Angelo Letizia.

Chapter 22. Reading Banned Books: Preparing Elementary Teachers to Navigate the Politics of Teaching and Learning; Aaron R. Gierhart.

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Research on International Civic Engagement
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Gewicht 533 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Erwachsenenbildung
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Politische Systeme
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Staat / Verwaltung
ISBN-13 979-8-88730-700-8 / 9798887307008
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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