2015
DOI: 10.1080/09620214.2015.1076705
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Citizenship education in Mexico: the depoliticisation of adolescence through secondary school

Abstract: Recent contributions have argued about the depoliticisation of citizenship education (CE), mainly through theoretical and documentary analyses, and based on the European context. Nonetheless, there is a lack of field studies which can provide empirical evidence about how does the depoliticisation of CE actually operate. Based on a mixedmethod research in Mexico City's secondary schools, this paper shows how the contemporary approach to CE, instead of looking at nurturing children's and adolescents' politicity,… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…She concludes that while the curriculum reflects a modern conception (global citizenship, social justice focus), the textbooks remain more traditional (nationalism, maintenance of status quo and a celebration of Argentina being the Latin American country with the most White people of European descendent). Pérez-Expósito (2015) observed a similar trend in the Mexican curriculum:a slow transition in the following directions: from a combination of Catholic morality and civic indoctrination to secularism; from authoritarianism to a commitment with democracy; from ideology to a procedural value education; from nationalism to a balance between localism, nationalism and cosmopolitanism; from cultural homogeneity and male domination to the acknowledgement of cultural diversity and gender equity; and, in the case of secondary education, from adultcentrism to an adolescent-centred orientation. (p. 230)…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…She concludes that while the curriculum reflects a modern conception (global citizenship, social justice focus), the textbooks remain more traditional (nationalism, maintenance of status quo and a celebration of Argentina being the Latin American country with the most White people of European descendent). Pérez-Expósito (2015) observed a similar trend in the Mexican curriculum:a slow transition in the following directions: from a combination of Catholic morality and civic indoctrination to secularism; from authoritarianism to a commitment with democracy; from ideology to a procedural value education; from nationalism to a balance between localism, nationalism and cosmopolitanism; from cultural homogeneity and male domination to the acknowledgement of cultural diversity and gender equity; and, in the case of secondary education, from adultcentrism to an adolescent-centred orientation. (p. 230)…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pérez-Expósito (2015), however, remains critical of the curriculum, which he argues, depoliticizes students, relying ‘strongly on moral and altruistic motivation . .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In my 2008 research, I could hardly find any FCE teachers who were still trying to pursue this kind of ‘authentic’ civic engagement from within the school—it involved swimming against too strong a current. And a recent study only confirms the trend I had perceived in 2008—that Mexican teachers are failing to encourage a more participatory approach to citizenship education (Pérez-Expósito, 2015). Metaphorically speaking, the schoolhouse wall has reasserted itself.…”
Section: Bridging the Schoolhouse Wallmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…GCE could build cosmopolitan solidarity but failed to challenge transnational inequality (Nash, 2008). Therefore, some criticize GCE as depoliticization of development education (McCloskey, 2016;Pérez-Expósito, 2015).…”
Section: Gce and Ngos' Roles In Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%