The International Journal of Progressive Education will publish a special issue in October 2012 on the theme of ‘Education for Active Citizenship’.
In recent years the adjective ‘active’ has often been added to the term
‘Citizenship Education’. Bernard Crick wrote ‘an education that
creates a disposition to active
citizenship is
a necessary condition of free societies’.
This
suggests that Active Citizenship is more desirable than Passive Citizenship –
but what do these terms mean, in terms of educational policy or educational
practice? Is it related by some policy makers to concerns about what is called
the democratic deficit? Or is it perceived of as a variant of service
learning? Are there different kinds of active citizenship, and of active
citizenship education? The term is open for debate, and open to be illustrated
by a variety of policies and practices from different countries.
We invite proposals for articles that
· discuss the development of active citizenship education
· analyse policies and/or practices that promote active citizenship education
· are drawn from/relate to a range of educational settings, from pre-school to higher education
· analyse active citizenship with reference to social class or gender
Articles may be theoretical, empirical or a mixture of the two; may draw on qualitative or quantitative analysis, or a combination. The editors welcome articles from a variety of perspectives; a range of countries within and beyond Europe; issues that affect students of different ages.
The issue will contain:
· An editorial in which key themes are highlighted and articles are briefly summarized;
· About 6 articles of between 6-9000 words incorporating a range of perspectives about active citizenship education;
· book reviews (each approximately 4-800 words long) on issues to do with citizenship education
Please note the following submission process and schedule:
Submission of proposals for articles: January 15th 2012
Submissions should consist of a proposed title and a synopsis of no more than 200 words. These will be considered by the editorial board, and a selection made to ensure a balanced range of content.
Invitation to submit full article: February 6th 2012
A limited number of articles will be commissioned by this date.
First submission by selected authors: April 22nd 2012
All submissions will be subject to the review process by the editorial board.
Feedback and requests for revisions: May 15th 2012
If necessary, the editorial board will request revisions by this date.
Final submission of selected articles: June 20th 2012
Final copy to press: July 15th 2012
Submission Guidelines
All manuscripts should be prepared in accordance
with the form and style as outlined in the American Psychological Association
Publication Manual (5th ed.).
Manuscripts should be double-spaced, including references, notes, abstracts,
quotations, and tables. The title page should include, for each author, name,
institutional
affiliation, mailing address, telephone number, e-mail address and a brief
biographical statement. The title page should be followed by an abstract of max
200 words. Tables
and references should follow APA style and be double-spaced. Manuscripts should
not exceed 35 pages (double-spaced), including tables, figures, and references.
Manuscripts should not be simultaneously submitted to another journal, nor
should they have been published elsewhere in considerably similar form or with
considerably similar content.
All process -submission, review, and revision- is carried out by electronic
mail. The submissions should be written using MS- DOS or compatible word
processors and sent to the e-mail addresses of the guest editor:
a.ross@londonmet.ac.uk