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CRITICAL PEDAGOGIES (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   145735


How can reflexivity inform critical pedagogies? insights from the theory versus practice debate / Grenier, Félix   Journal Article
Grenier, Félix Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The constitutive effects of teaching activities on the study of international relations (IR) and on the practice of international relations have generated a long-term interest in approaches to teaching and learning in IR. Recently, a cluster of literature has emerged that focuses on critical pedagogy in IR, which questions traditional relations of power, ideas, and norms in the classroom. However, these inquiries have yet to be systematically connected with reflexivity in IR (i.e., the developing awareness of the diversity, production, and positionality of knowledge). This article proposes that critical pedagogies and reflexivity are mutually reinforcing. It argues that applying reflexivity to teaching activities in IR raises awareness about the social conditions enabling the (re)production of specific understandings of the world. To support this proposition, the article presents and evaluates a trial IR seminar inspired by reflexivity. In this trial seminar, three aspects of reflexivity were developed (i.e., theoretical, sociological, and self-reflexivity), each of which supports critical pedagogy. This article explains how these three perspectives were infused into different trial seminar activities, to varying degrees of success. It also evaluates how the development of the reflexive agenda can be of particular benefit to IR scholars, IR students, and critical pedagogy as a whole.
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ID:   157854


Toward critical pedagogies of the international? student resistance, other-regardedness, and self-formation in the neoliberal un / Odysseos, Louiza ; Pal, Maïa   Journal Article
Odysseos, Louiza Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Anxieties regarding colonial and neoliberal education have generated multiple calls for critical international pedagogies. Scholars of critical pedagogy have analyzed the pedagogies of the neoliberal project, whose ethos and economic imperatives aim to produce apolitical consumers and future citizens. Such calls, this article argues, articulate a concern about other-regardedness, critiquing the impact of neoliberalism on the cultivation of student values and relations toward politics, society, and others. How can we articulate a critical international pedagogy informed by, and enhancing, students’ and future citizens’ other-regardedness toward those “superfluous” and “disposable” others outside the classroom and the formal curriculum? To this end, we mobilize Michel Foucault’s thinking of “counter-conduct” to illuminate how students resist being conducted as self-interested and apolitical consumers. Such practices remain largely unexplored in examinations of recent student protests and occupations. Examining the 2005 student occupation of a French university against the local government’s abandonment of asylum-seekers, we discuss students’ own processes of social participation and self-formation, thus exploring the possibilities and tensions for advancing a critical and other-regarding pedagogy. Greater attention to students resisting the historically blind and market-driven rationalities and techniques of governing—inside and outside classrooms and curricula—marks an important point of departure for critical pedagogies of the international.
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