8 Citizenship PDF
8 Citizenship PDF
8 Citizenship PDF
The most obvious difference between the year M and the year MM is the billions
of extra people for whom this second millennium will possess some significance.
—R. Lacey and D. Danziger, The Year 1000: What Life Was Like at the
Turn of the First Millennium. (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1999):
195.
As we cross into the next millennium, the planet and the human family are facing an unprecedented
set of challenges, issues, and problems. These include:
• The globalization of the economy and growing economic disparities
• A rapid deterioration in the quality of the global environment
• Inequities regarding access to and use of information technologies
• Increased regulation and control by governments over the lives of people
• Increasing levels of consumerism
• Regional and national conflicts based upon race, religion, and ethnicity
• Migrations of massive numbers of peoples due to these conflicts
• The loss of political efficacy
• A decline in moral and political leadership
How can we respond to these challenges both as members of a particular nation-state as well as
members of the community of nations in a manner that is thoughtful, active, personal, and yet committed
to the common good? This is a key problem facing social studies education in the coming decades, and it
requires a new approach to citizenship education in schools.
The problem with our present educational systems is that they have not, by and large, adjusted to
the new historical realities. This is not a statement of blame; it is a reflection of an accelerated historical
lag created by an unprecedented magnitude of change. Certain changes must take place in the content,
the methods, and the social context of education if schools are to become more effective agents of citizen
education in a global age.
The Global Economy. We are living through an economic transformation that will rearrange the
politics and economics of the coming century. Increasingly, we will not speak of national products or
technologies, national corporations and national industries. Each nation’s primary political task will be
to cope with the centrifugal forces of the global economy which tear at the ties binding citizens together
—bestowing ever greater wealth on the most skilled and insightful, while consigning the less skilled to a
declining standard of living. As borders become more meaningless in economic terms, those citizens best
positioned to thrive in the world market will be tempted to slip the bonds of national allegiance, and by
so doing disengage themselves from their less favored fellows.1 As the economic convergence continues,
we must ask how relevant the nation-state can be as a force toward civil democracy.
Technology and Communications. We are already “online” to the world—although the key unspoken
idea here is, “if we have access.” Information is power, with the potential to create wealth. Since
information is a key economic asset and speed in moving information gives an economic edge, wealth
creation increasingly means access to information. The global gap between the “haves” and “have-nots”
is increasingly a question of the information access that makes material wealth possible.2 As Hauchler
and Kennedy point out in their book, Global Trends.
New technologies promise solutions to global problems such as hunger, environmental destruction,
and disease; but they also raise questions about the ethical and social problems associated with an
automated world. In addition, they widen the technological gap between industrial and developing
countries.3
Population and Environment. Of all the forces that will change the world over the next generation,
demography is probably the most important. The numbers of mouths to feed, the relative sizes of the
populations of the industrial world and the less developed countries, the age distribution in the west—all
of these forces will have a profound effect not just on the world economy, but on societies both rich and
poor. Population shifts have an inexorable effect on the world’s living standards, its politics, its environment,
and on how people behave towards each other.4
As the planet’s population continues to rise, enormous pressures are placed upon the environment.
The list of global problems includes desertification, destruction of arable lands, depletion of major
aquifers and other sources of fresh water, acid rain, disposal of nuclear and chemical waste, resource
depletion, erosion, salinization due to poor irrigation practices, poisoning of the atmosphere, ozone
depletion and global warming, a growing list of endangered species and the loss of biodiversity, especially
in rainforest regions, and a host of other problems.
High rates of population growth are especially pronounced in the world’s poorer countries, and
Hauchler and Kennedy contend that only if “extreme poverty is eliminated, health and education
improved, and the social status of women enhanced will it be possible to put a brake on the growth in
population.”5
Global Movement: Migration, Diversity, and Refugees. Some have described the late twentieth century
as “the age of migration.” Vast numbers of people are moving across borders, making virtually every
country more multiethnic in composition. Given that most future population growth will occur in the
non-industrialized world in the near future, migration pressures will increase significantly as people in
the less developed, marginalized regions seek to move to more affluent areas.
Migration movements are becoming one of the biggest world order problems. They endanger peace
in and between states, and severely test human rights. The social gap between islands of prosperity and
regions of poverty is growing and many developing countries are becoming less and less able to provide
their ever younger, fast growing populations with work and food. That builds up migration pressure
across frontiers, regions and continents.6
Although parochial allegiances are supposed to fade as the world becomes increasingly integrated
economically and politically, the reality is that more racial, ethnic, and national groups throughout the
world are asserting their identity. One reason is that globalization has made the myth of a culturally
homogeneous state even more unrealistic; another is that racial, ethnic and national groups subject to
discrimination may fear that they will be excluded from the benefits of globalization by the groups that
dominate them in their present nation states. Thus, the general rules of political life in many countries
are being challenged by a new set of specific interests promoting the “politics of cultural difference.”7
In reality, “globalization” has created more room for minorities to maintain a distinct identity and
group life and each state that seeks to be cohesive needs to be more open to pluralism and diversity As a
result, the challenge of multiculturalism is here to stay.8
Some Critical Questions. Some commentators speak in almost Pollyanish tones about the future
benefits of globalization. After consideration of the above four factors, we must be aware of the reasons
why critics of globalization question its inherent nature and its impact. Summarizing some of these
critical views, Baylis and Smith remind us that:
• Globalization is often equated with a stage of capitalism or western
imperialism and as such carries a lot of baggage with it;
• Globalization is uneven in its effects, producing both winners and losers, the
latter especially amongst the poor;
• Globalization obscures accountability in that it is difficult to trace and
specify responsibility;
• Globalization gives rise to paradoxes and even processes of counter-global-
ization, e.g., more global homogeneity engenders fierce reactions that
strengthen local identities, be they religious, ethnic or national.9
These criticisms of globalization are likely to feature prominently in international debates in the
twenty-first century, and it is important that our students be aware of the issues that they raise.
One of our most vital challenges is to provide the education and schooling that builds these
competencies.
Schools as Centers of Citizen Education
The School as a Model Community
We believe that the task of preparing citizens for the future can best be addressed by structuring the
school itself in such a way that it becomes a model of multidimensional citizenship. The school structure
and organization, its faculty and staff, curriculum, assessment measures, the body of student learners and
the general atmosphere within the school, must be focused upon the development of the four dimensions
of citizenship. The students must live and learn in a living laboratory of democracy from the earliest
years of schooling if multidimensionality is to be acquired. The school must become a democratic
institution, and the role of educators must be consistent with the aims of multidimensional citizenship.
Students must see their teachers as living examples of what they are professing, as people who are
personally involved in their communities, working on projects of a civic or public nature, knowledgeable
about developments in other parts of the world, and able to debate key civic and public issues with other
colleagues in the school as well as those in the community at large. They need to be aware of the historical
antecedents of these issues so that they have a context for their discourse, and to possess a vision of what
might be done to resolve or at least improve the situation.18
A Deliberation-Based Curriculum
Finally, we recommend that a deliberation-based curriculum be implemented within the school.
The goal is the development of global and civic-minded citizens. The curriculum would apply to all
grade levels and, as appropriate, to all subject areas. Further, we would suggest that this curriculum be
organized around six major ethical questions or issues that cut across the breadth of the curriculum.
1. What should be done in order to promote equity and fairness within and
among societies?
2. What should be the balance between the right to privacy and free and open
access to information?
3. What should be the balance between protecting the environment and
meeting human needs?
4. What should be done to cope with issues of population growth, genetic
engineering and children in poverty?
5. What should be done to develop shared universal values while at the same
time respecting local values?
6. What should be done to empower learners to act upon the above, in both
their schools and wider communities?20
We believe that these questions are best addressed in multiple learning environments and through
interdisciplinary studies both in school and in the wider communities in which students live. The under-
lying foundation of this learning must be deliberation. Students of all ages must be given the opportunity
to examine in depth the great issues of our day, which will most certainly impact their lives fully in the
coming years. This is the true essence of the multidimensional citizen. Without this vision, and the will
to implement it, those now in school are at best likely to be passive victims of the events of the 21st
century rather than shapers of their own future.
Notes
3. L. Hauchler and P. M. Kennedy, Global Trends: The World Almanac of Development and Peace (New
York: Continuum, 1994), 15.
6. Ibid.
7. See, for example, W. Kymlicka, Multicultural Citizenship. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995); G.
Ladson-Billings and W. F. Tate, “Toward a Critical Race Theory of Education,” Teachers College Record
97 (Fall 1995), 47-68; C. West, “The New Cultural Politics of Difference,” in Cameron McCarthy and
Warren Crichlow (eds.), Race, Identity and Representation in Education (London: Routledge, 1993), 11-
23.
8. Kymlicka, 9.
9. Baylis and S. Smith, The Globalization of World Politics (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), 9–11.
10. J. J. Cogan and R. Derricott, Citizenship for the 21st Century: An International Perspective on Education
(London: Kogan Page, Ltd., 1998).
11. Ibid.
12. W. Parker, “Advanced Ideas about Democracy: Toward a Pluralist Conception of Citizen
Education,” Teachers College Record 98, 1 (1996), 105–125. See also C. A. Torres, “Democracy,
Education, and Multiculturalism: Dilemmas of Citizenship in a Global World,” Comparative Education
Review 42, no. 4 (1998), 421-447.
13. See J. Patrick, “Civil Society in Democracy’s Third Wave: Implications for Civic Education,” Social
Education 60, 7 (1996), 414–417.
15. R. Hanvey, An Attainable Global Perspective (New York: Center for Global Perspectives, 1976).
16. D. Grossman, “Teaching about a Changing China,” Social Education 50, no. 1 (1986), 100–101.
20. W. Parker et al., “Making It Work: Implementing Multidimensional Citizenship,” in Cogan and
Derricott, 137.
John J. Cogan is Professor of Education at the University of Minnesota. David Grossman is Professor in
and Head of the Social Sciences Department, Hong Kong Institute of Education, Hong Kong, Special
Administrative Region, China. Mei-hui Liu is Associate Professor and Director, Institute for
Multicultural Studies, National Hualien Teachers College, Hualien, Taiwan.
Cogan, John J., David Grossman, and Mel-hui-Liu. “Citizenship: The Democratic Imagination in a Global/Local Context.”
National Council for the Social Studies. Used with permission.