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Inclusive Education Twenty Years after Salamanca New edition [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 374 pages, height x width: 225x150 mm, weight: 550 g
  • Sērija : Disability Studies in Education 19
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Feb-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433126966
  • ISBN-13: 9781433126963
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 48,02 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 374 pages, height x width: 225x150 mm, weight: 550 g
  • Sērija : Disability Studies in Education 19
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Feb-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1433126966
  • ISBN-13: 9781433126963
This edited volume discusses UNESCO’s contributions to inclusive education over the past 20 years, the normative and technical leadership roles this organization has been playing together with its peers and competitors in educational development, and the current status of this issue in academic debates, as well as conceptualizations from different cultures.

This edited volume discusses UNESCO’s contributions to inclusive education over the past 20 years, the normative and technical leadership roles this organization has been playing together with its peers and competitors in educational development, and the current status of this issue in academic debates, as well as conceptualizations from different cultures. The chapters reflect and critically discuss a range of positions on the relation between inclusive education, education for all, and special needs education and particularly express the role disability plays in these thematic contexts.
The book brings to light that although the term inclusive education is commonly associated with people with disabilities, there are contexts – e.g., research strands on school development in the UK – in which inclusive education is considered as an approach in which the focus of special (needs) education is widened in terms of the target group, reaching out to the heterogeneity of learners, thus taking diversity as a starting point for educational theory and practice. This book highlights the differences in narratives of inclusive education in the United States and abroad and is intended to bridge the various approaches to the study of inclusive education and disability, particularly in the US, the UK, and the Nordic countries within Europe. Although academics and students in Disability Studies are the target audience, the book is also of high relevance to policy makers in the growing field of inclusive education, as well as being potentially interesting for practitioners in education and social work.

Contents: Emily Vargas-Barón: The Salamanca Declaration: Still Our Guide
for the Future Florian Kiuppis/Rune Sarromaa Hausstätter: Inclusive
Education for All, and Especially for Some? On Different Interpretations of
Who and What the «Salamanca Process» Concerns Colette Chabbott: Salamanca
as a World Conference: The Role of International Development Organizations
Lena Saleh: Taking Up the Mantle of Good Hope: A Memoir Mel Ainscow:
Struggling for Equity in Education: The Legacy of Salamanca Jerome Mindes:
Putting Disability on the «Education for All<187> Agenda Siri Wormnęs: The
UNESCO Flagship: The Right to Education for Persons with Disabilities:
Towards Inclusion Xavier Rambla: Inclusive Education, Education for All,
and the Policy Cycle Jonathan Rix/John Parry: Ongoing Exclusion Within
Universal Education: Why Education for All Is Not Inclusive Rune
Sarromaa/Hausstätter/Markku Jahnukainen: From Integration to Inclusion and
the Role of Special Education Dóra S./ Bjarnason/ Gretar L. Marinósson:
Salamanca and Beyond: Inclusive Education Still Up for Debate Scot
Danforth: Technocracy and Inclusive Education in the United States
Sigamoney M. Naicker: The Politics of Inclusive Education in South Africa
Julie Allan: Waiting for Inclusive Education? An Exploration of Conceptual
Confusions and Political Struggles Markus Dederich: Heterogeneity, Radical
Otherness and the Discourse on Inclusive Education - A Philosophical
Reflection Susan Baglieri/Alicia A. Broderick: Education and Inclusivity:
Imagining and Building Education for All (Both Within and Without Schooling)
Lani Florian: Inclusive Pedagogy: An Alternative Approach to Difference and
Inclusion Elina Lehtomäki/Sanna Hukkanen: Tanzanian Girls and Women with
[ Dis]abilities Claim Their Right to Education Ignacio
Calderón-Almendros/Cristóbal Ruiz-Romįn: Education as Liberation from
Oppression: Personal and Social Constructions of Disability Judith
Hollenweger: Reconciling «All with Special»: A Way Forward Towards a More
Inclusive Thinking Dan Goodley/Florian Kiuppis: Mapping the «Individual»:
Invigorating Social Theories of Inclusive Education Peter Mittler: Working
for Inclusive Education by 2030 Roger Slee: Another Salamanca? Tara
Flood: From Salamanca to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities and Beyond.
Florian Kiuppis is an Associate Professor at Lillehammer University College, Faculty of Education and Social Studies. He completed his doctoral studies at Humboldt University. From 20112015, he has been the chair of the Inclusive Education Special Interest Group within the Comparative and International Education Society. Rune Sarromaa Hausstätter is currently Professor of special education at Lillehammer University College. He holds a Doctor of Philosophy from Helsinki University. His research focus is on the philosophy of special needs education.