ABSTRACT

This book examines the approach to civic education in six societies located on the Pacific Rim: Australia, Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Thailand, and the US. In these scrupulously designed studies, the contributors investigate the recent re-emergence of civic education in this region. Developments such as globalization, nationalism, and sovereignty have profound effects on how schools make "good citizens." These essays reveal how definitions of citizenship are contested and revised under such influences, and interrogate differences in civic education from nation to nation. As societies attempt to strike a balance between obedience and critical thinking, schools become the primary site of these transformations. Analyzing both educational policy and its implementation, these contributors offer a groundbreaking, comparative study that grounds civic education historically and politically.

chapter |23 pages

Civic Education in Australia

Four New South Wales Cases

chapter |24 pages

Civic Education in Hong Kong

A Tale of Two Schools 1

chapter |23 pages

Recent Developments in Civic Education

The Case of Japan

chapter |25 pages

Civic Education at the Crossroads

Case Study of Taiwan

chapter |24 pages

Developing the Good Person

Civic Education in Three Thai Schools

chapter |25 pages

Civic Education in the American Midwest

A Case Study of Three Schools

chapter |23 pages

A Comparative Overview

Civic Education across the Six Societies