Fr. 85.00

Education and Ethno-Politics - Defending Identity in Iraq

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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The Iraqi Disputed Territories consist of 15 districts stretching across four northern governorates. While an administrative solution for the disputed territories remains evasive, minority groups across the region have been pulled into a clash over demographic composition as each disputed district faces ethnically defined claims. Meanwhile, inter-ethnic communal tensions are rising and questions of identity increasingly overshadow day-to-day life.

There has been little research on the impact of heightened identity politics on the everyday lives of citizens. Regardless of the final administrative outcome, the multi-ethnic population of the region requires services and systems of co-existence, and in the fragile ethno-political environment of the disputed territories, the way in which the education system manages ethnic diversity is crucial. It is within this context that Education and Ethno-Politics examines the development of education systems across the region post 2003. Drawing on over 50 interviews with regional education officials and community representatives, the book presents the impact of amplified ethno-politics on the reconstruction of education in Iraq. It provides the first academic exploration into education in the region, exploring the significance of cultural reproduction and the link between demands for ethnically specific education, societal security and the wider political contestation over the territory.

A comprehensive analysis of the powerful role of education in identity-based conflicts, this book offers a highly insightful examination of Iraq's past and present, as well as formulating policy recommendations for its future. It is an essential resource for students, scholars and policy makers with focus on the Middle East, specifically Iraqi and Kurdish studies, as well as those interested in Education policy and Conflict studies.

List of contents

1. Chapter One: Ethno-politics, the Ba’ath era and the Disputed Territories 2. Chapter Two: Conceptual Framework 3. Chapter Three: Iraqi Education through a Societal Security Lens 4. Chapter 4: Ethnically appropriate education: Threats and Survival 5. Chapter Five: Education’s interaction with conflict 6. Chapter six: Conclusion

About the author

Kelsey Shanks is a Research Fellow at the University of Exeter’s Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies and Research Associate at Ulster University’s UNESCO Centre. She has also worked as an Education Technical Advisor for the United Nations Assistance Mission to Iraq and served as a Peace-building Education Advisor to UNICEF in Iraq. Her research focuses on the relationship between education, youth and conflict in the Middle East.

Summary

The Iraqi Disputed Territories consist of 15 districts stretching across four northern governorates and curve from the Syrian to Iranian borders. While an administrative solution for the disputed territories remains evasive, minority groups across the region have been pulled into a clash over demographic composition as each disputed district fac

Product details

Authors Kelsey Shanks, Kelsey (University of York Shanks
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd.
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 12.12.2019
 
EAN 9780367871475
ISBN 978-0-367-87147-5
No. of pages 160
Series Exeter Studies in Ethno Politics
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Education > General, dictionaries
Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education

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