Monday 27 January 2014

Reading a great article from the Policy and Practice e-journal - Catalysing the 'Shadow Spaces': Challenging Development Discourse from within the DEEEP Project: http://www.developmenteducationreview.com/issue17-perspectives1



Catalysing the 'Shadow Spaces': Challenging Development Discourse from within the DEEEP Project

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Tobias Troll and Amy Skinner
Introduction
Development education (DE) is in many cases striking a ‘Faustian bargain’ (Selby and Kagawa, 2011) as it compromises its radical roots and values base for a place at the policy-making table or within a donor-led agenda, which often serves to reinforce rather than challenge the status quo.  This has led to concerns that whilst claiming to challenge global injustice and address the structural causes of inequality and poverty, DE is actually being ‘declawed’ and in many cases the skills, values and knowledge underpinning DE are being softened to accommodate, rather than question the prevailing neoliberal global agenda.  In this respect, there is a risk that DE ‘endorses [...] the very ideologies and political-economic arrangements that are responsible for producing or exacerbating conditions of poverty and injustice’ (Bryan, 2011: 1) as it fails to challenge the systemic causes of inequality or confront key issues such as consumerism, the economic growth mantra and neoliberal globalisation (Selby and Kagawa, 2011: 19).
Yet this hesitation to address questions of power and systemic change is not confined to the DE sector.  The Irish development non-governmental organisation (NGO) Trócaire (2011) argues in its Leading Edge 2020 report that development NGOs must engage far more with power and politics instead of positing themselves as service providers of donor defined aid projects, if they want to remain relevant and make a meaningful contribution to global justice.  Indeed, discussions on the post-2015 development agenda, which are increasingly focusing on tackling issues of sustainability, inequality and ‘one world’ development (Fiedler, 2011), as well as reactions to the financial crisis in Europe have prompted many development NGOs to question current growth and development paradigms and consider whether their change agendas are radical enough to deal with the systemic causes underpinning the issues they address (Shutt, 2009).
It would therefore seem that both DE and development organisations are facing an ‘identity crisis’ which is intentionally or unintentionally leading to the opening of critical spaces for reflection on the way we work and our role as organisations in contributing to greater social justice.  This provides an opportunity for DE practitioners to re-connect with the radical and transformative foundations of the field itself and move away from being a ‘movement which speaks only to itself’ (McCollum in Bourn, 2008: 13) in order to make a meaningful contribution to the broader development discourse at a time when development paradigms are being increasingly questioned.
Rather than seeing DE as a ‘service’ which is ‘delivered’ to target groups external to our organisations, this article will explore the idea of ‘applied development education’ at an organisational level in order to ‘cast the gaze on ourselves’ (Bryan, 2011: 2) and stimulate critical reflection about the values, principles and ambitions underlying our own work and the work of the development NGOs or networks we are often a part of.  It will suggest how applying DE inspired learning processes within organisations can help to facilitate critical reflection about current development paradigms and how to become more effective agents for real progressive change.
The second part of the article will look at the DEEEP project (previously an abbreviation for ‘Developing Europeans’ Engagement for the Eradication of Global Poverty’,  but recently changed to the slogan of ‘Citizen Empowerment for Global Justice’ in line with the vision for the fourth phase of the project). DEEEP is a European support and coordination mechanism for the DE sector, which recently adopted a more radical approach to challenging current NGO practices, both in terms of the project’s organisational setup and through repositioning DE within the wider CONCORD (the European NGO confederation for relief and development) network of which it is a part.  DEEEP is presented as an attempt from within the DE sector to sidestep the dangers of the ‘Faustian bargain’ and determine the project’s potential to radiate beyond a radical ‘shadow space’ (Selby and Kagawa, 2011: 26) and induce ‘spillover’ into the broader development sector.
Business as usual is no longer an option
Both the development and development education sectors are in essence dealing with a similar challenge: should they proceed with ‘business as usual’ or is there a need to be more radical in approaches to social change?  Debates within the development sector about the shortcomings of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and what a post-2015 development framework should look like, are providing a space for rethinking development and creating ‘new narratives for a changing world’ (Sumner and Wiegmann, 2012).  Changing geopolitical relations and the collapse of the traditional bi-polar world view of a rich ‘North’ and a poor ‘South’ coupled with rising inequalities, and multiple economic, social and ecological crises is leading to a questioning of current models of development and growth and recognition of the need for alternative measures of societal progress.  For example, applying indexes of development such as well-being or happiness as opposed to the more traditional financial indicators of development such as per capita Gross Domestic Product (GDP).  There appears to be gradual recognition from Progressive Development Forum (http://progressivedevelopmentforum.wordpress.com/) and others within the sector of the need to move away from an aid-driven agenda to a more politically engaged agenda centred on social justice which tackles the structural causes of inequality (Melamad and Samman, 2013; Shutt, 2009).  Notions of ‘global development’ (Cascant and Kelbert, 2012) or ‘world development’ (Sumner and Wiegmann, 2012) are gaining ground and the accompanying acknowledgement of a need to change consumerist driven growth and lifestyles in the North.
In this respect, there is scope for most NGOs to be much more ambitious in their agendas for change:
“INGOs will not be able to pursue a more progressive social change agenda if they simply look for improved ways to do the things they already do.  Instead, it is argued that self-aware NGOs need to face a choice: to be agents of progressive social change, and in order to do this, transform themselves radically or, alternatively, continue to make modest efforts to ameliorate some of the least defensible aspects of the inequitable global capitalist system of which they are a part, but admitting that this does not really amount to progressive social change” (Shutt, 2009: 19).
As Sumner and Wiegmann (2012: 2) state: ‘In all likelihood, nothing less than a fundamental turnaround of world development will be needed to open the road toward a sustainable development for all’.  They go on to ask a very relevant question for development education practitioners, as to whether ‘the fundamental rethinking needed to put the world on a sustainable trajectory needs to come from a wider group beyond development scholars?’
Indeed, many of these issues detailed above reflect DE’s ideas for paradigm change (i.e., the need for a justice rather than aid paradigm for development, notions of one world development, reflection on lifestyles and responsibilities of those in the ‘North’ for sustainable development etc.), yet how much of this discussion can we honestly say has been prompted by or contributed to by DE practitioners?  Although many DE practitioners work within broader development structures, in many cases DE has remained within its own ‘bubble’, considering development discourse and practice to not be ‘progressive enough’, rather than trying to find critical spaces to actively engage with and try to contribute to this gradually changing development discourse.  Alternatively, feeling squeezed between funding constraints and a possible repositioning as educational service provider following a donor set agenda, and a ‘wallflower’, low-priority status (Murphy, 2011) in development NGOs under permanent threat of phase out if the funding situation changes or if ‘impact’ and ‘effectiveness’ are not sufficiently demonstrated, DE has also shrunk from dealing with some of these core questions about radicality, transformation and the need for systemic change (Bryan, 2011; Murphy, 2011; Selby and Kagawa, 2011: 20-21).  Indeed, as Murphy (2011: 52) found in her research with development educators in Ireland, ‘participants are challenged by the charity model of development that underpins their respective NGOs operations, and ‘the hardest thing is to challenge the NGO you’re working in’.  This is further hindered by the lack of a firm and unified identity or positioning of the development education sector (Bourn, 2011), wavering between ‘soft’ and ‘critical’ approaches (Andreotti, 2006), often opting for ‘safe’ DE which just pays ‘lip service to global justice’ (Murphy, 2011: 53-54) and leaves ‘the sector vulnerable to politicization and unable to challenge dominant ideas’ (Khoo, 2011: 4).
Yet critical DE approaches which draw on DE’s transformative and radical foundations are well-placed to contribute to thinking about fundamental structural changes needed to lead to a world of greater justice.  As ‘shadow spaces’ are starting to emerge within the development sector and development discourse starts to touch upon some of DE’s key concerns, is it not the right time for DE to reactivate its radical, emancipatory roots and ‘think more creatively and laterally about strategies for creative use of shadow spaces and for inducing spillover into the formal?’ (Selby and Kagawa, 2011: 26).
Bringing DE from the margins to the centre of development discourse
In response to the identity crises of development NGOs and development education organisations outlined above, the DEEEP4 project has recently been initiated within CONCORD as a ‘transformative action experiment’ which attempts to reconnect DE with its radical roots and to facilitate critical learning processes within CONCORD about the role of development NGOs as agents for systemic change.  The conceptualisation of DEEEP4 has been strongly influenced by the Smart Civil Society Organisations’ (CSO) initiative (http://www.smart-csos.org/), hosted by WWF UK until 2011 and now an independent ‘lab’ of civil society leaders and researchers which proposes a radical reconsideration of NGO practices in order to stimulate systemic change towards a more just and sustainable world.
This ‘lab’ addresses the question of why CSOs – despite their power, visibility and public trust – fail to challenge the neoliberal market place agenda which is at the heart of many of the social, environmental and cultural distortions they intend to address.  This is indeed quite a challenge for development NGOs, busy with daily policy business, trapped in topical silos and steered by the aspiration of short term wins, when the inclusion of momentary buzz words in an official policy paper becomes the success story of the year.  The focus on single issues and short term incremental change, and the lack of system thinking and cross-sectoral cooperation (Narberhaus, 2011) –  characteristics of CSO practice in many sectors – is also a challenge for the development education sector given that issues related to ‘economic growth, neo-liberal globalisation and consumerism’ (Selby and Kagawa, 2011: 19) are largely absent from DE discourse.
Getting out of the ‘business as usual’ trap and starting to pull the ‘key leverage points’ for change identified in the ‘Smart CSOs report’ (Narberhaus, 2011), such as systems thinking, developing new models for change based on cultural transformation and intrinsic values, as well as building cross-sectoral global movements uniting for change at a structural, rather than issue-focused level, is a major strategic shift for most NGOs.  DEEEP4 represents an experiment to try out some of the Smart CSOs thinking in practice, and to hopefully scale up its experience in the wider CONCORD confederation, as detailed below.
DEEEP as an example of applied development education
DEEEP is a European Commission-funded, project-based support mechanism that was created by CONCORD’s development education working group (the Development Awareness Raising and Education [DARE] Forum) ten years ago.  When DEEEP entered its fourth project phase, running from 2013 to 2015, many elements of Smart CSOs thinking were already considered during the drafting process, and more concretely implemented in the first months of the project, when the team and strategic orientation was set up.  A two-day ‘DEEEP retreat’ marked the launch of the project and brought together a team of six and a range of stakeholders from CONCORD who agreed upon the repositioning of the project as a tool for systemic change.  As a result, the project’s stakeholders positioned DEEEP as a tool for social transformation based on values and citizens' participation:
“DEEEP addresses global challenges by addressing the structure and power relations inherent within the current global political, socio-economic system.  It aims to relocate 'development' as something which needs to happen everywhere: a one world endeavor and a shared responsibility of us all.  These changes can only happen through a renewed civil society, driven by a new generation of active citizens empowered by global learning and emancipatory campaigning practices, and joined as and in an organized international civil society in their demands for global social justice” (DEEEP4 Vision and Mission Statement).
This is an ambition which goes far beyond previous project phases, and the objectives of many development NGOs.  As outlined above, development education today is still largely defined through the traditional triad of awareness, understanding and action (see definitions at http://deeep.org/dear-definitions.html), with a vague aspiration to ‘contribute to the eradication of poverty’ (European Consensus on Development: The Contribution of Development Education and Awareness Raising, 2007), yet in many cases bypassing the challenging questions related to the economic and political system shaping our world (Selby and Kagawa, 2011).  DEEEP chose an explicitly utopian and radical standpoint as its approach to DE, based on Freirean thinking about the impossibility of neutrality in education (Freire, 1995).  The participatory vision process led to broad ownership of this radical repositioning of DEEEP from a support mechanism for one CONCORD working group to a confederation-wide recognised tool to bring about meaningful transformation within civil society and ultimately in the economic and political system.
DEEEP within CONCORD
DEEEP aims to ‘gain recognition of DEAR as a means for reconceptualising the overall development paradigm in practice and as providing a space and a tool to transform thinking, practice and policies for a shift towards political and systemic change’ (DEEEP4 Vision and Mission Statement).  The implementation of this transformational ambition of DEEEP aims to deliver activities, which go far beyond a traditional charity approach to DE (reinforcing public support for development aid), toward actions with a more system oriented, cross-sectoral and long-term citizen engagement with social change.  Concretely speaking, this is so far being attempted through the activities described below.
A ‘new political narrative’ for the development sector
The DARE forum saw the discussions going on within the wider CONCORD confederation about the post-2015 development agenda as an opportunity for DE to move from the margins towards the centre of development discourse by helping to facilitate a critical reflection process on CONCORD’s future strategy.  The DARE forum, through DEEEP, therefore played an instrumental role in initiating a new political narrative process within CONCORD.  As Selby and Kagawa (2011: 27) point out, ‘seeking to effect transformative change involves […] developing and building outwards from a network of the sympathetic within and across institutions and systems’ and through tapping into the critical spaces opening up within the broader development confederation of which it is a part.  By following such an approach the DARE forum has managed to bring DE principles and perspectives to the fore and make the political narrative process one of CONCORD's three priorities for 2013.
This new narrative process is bringing together CONCORD members in a joint learning process inspired by DE participatory learning methodologies and focused on rethinking the role of development organisations in order to become more effective agents for change in the fight against poverty and injustice.  This relates especially to questions of power, politics and global citizenship. An online platform (http://extranet.concordeurope.org/projects/politicalnarrative) has been established using innovative crowd-sourcing methods in order to identify the key issues which need to be addressed, which were then taken up further in the 2013 CONCORD General Assembly.  The DARE forum has contributed to these discussions and issues of global citizenship, local-global links, and creating a sense of global responsibility and engagement for global justice have been identified as some of the key ambitions for the development sector.  DEEEP is actively contributing to the momentum of this initiative and has made a concrete proposal on how the initial reflective process can be taken forward and put into practice within the confederation.
DEEEP also facilitated the participation of CONCORD in the first ever European Citizens Summit, which took place in Brussels in June 2013 and united 230 participants from all sectors of civil society to explore a new vision and narrative for Europe, based on shared values such as solidarity and justice – this was quite out of the ordinary for a confederation whose main scope remains institutional policy work.  Furthermore, DEEEP is organising a global conference in Johannesburg in November which will kick-off a three year process towards ‘building a global citizens’ movement’.  Through facilitating CONCORD’s participation in an initiative which focuses on global justice and citizens empowerment and promotes cross-sectoral engagement, it will support development practitioners within CONCORD to collaborate with non-traditional development stakeholders such as social movements, activists, popular educators etc.
Intrinsic to all these activities are DEEEP4’s communication, advocacy, research and capacity development strategies which have all made this transformative ambition a key focus of their work.  For example, DEEEP will experiment with a ‘new advocacy’ which aims to develop a more empowering, participatory and political approach to advocacy which aims at longer term systemic change rather than short term policy gains.
Internal practices and policies within DEEEP
Besides DEEEP's engagement with broader processes within CONCORD, it is also trying to apply key DE values and practices to the way it works ‘internally’ in its organisational set up.  In this respect, DEEEP has established an explicit value-base to the project, which is shared by the team and the management, and which is the baseline for all activities and decisions, including those that go beyond the ‘core business’ of development education.  For example, ambitious internal ‘green policies’ are being developed, and the HR policies attempt to follow a logic of empowerment rather than traditional line management.  Instead of solely contracting a final project evaluation, a ‘critical friend’ will accompany the project permanently to facilitate an emancipatory learning process and an empowerment approach to evaluation.  Collectively, the DEEEP team is working towards establishing itself as a community of learners, as well as practitioners, in our specific roles.  Regular team meetings and retreats will allow staff to reflect and learn together and co-shape project development.  By applying a systems thinking approach, we will try to critically assess all organisational practices and implement innovative and sustainable solutions regarding procurement, climate impact, staff policies, fundraising etc.  For example, inspired by research carried out by the New Economics Foundation (2010) into the multiple societal and planetary benefits of shortening the working week, all DEEEP staff members have 60-80 percent working positions.  In line with its experimental nature, the project also tries to continuously cultivate new ‘shadow spaces’ and ‘seeds’ for new forms of DE and NGO practice which are rooted in the values and vision of truly emancipatory change.
Possible risks of adopting a more radical approach
Clearly, the ‘radicalisation’ of DEEEP is not without risks and possible contradictions.  We are still in the very early phases of the project, where a lot of energy has been dedicated to reshaping the ideological framework of DEEEP through the vision process and using the Smart CSO approach as a tool for doing so.  Yet, it is still to be proven that DEEEP will be able to live up to these high ambitions, and that the conceptual thinking behind it, such as the Smart CSO ‘leverage points’ (Narberhaus, 2011), will be the right tools to deliver results.  DEEEP’s approach could also be considered too idealistic and not grounded enough in the reality of the structural framework within which DEEEP is situated.  Indeed, if DEEEP were to fail as a ‘transformational action experiment’, it may risk discrediting not only CONCORD and the DARE Forum, but also a more ambitious conceptualisation of DE at pan-European level.
Furthermore, it is questionable whether development educators (DEEEP’s  main constituency and target group) are in fact the right people to initiate systemic change.  Do they have the power and political talent to be serious political actors for change?  Indeed, many might suggest that it would be more effective to address global justice through working with political and civil activists, and in particular with movements from outside Europe, rather than development NGOs. While time will tell if DEEEP was too ambitious, the project’s stakeholders hope that even if it does fail in some of its ambitions, the overall effect of transforming the project into a more radical tool for change will provide inspiration for development NGOs beyond the DE sector, and possibly contribute to a re-conceptualisation of DE, learning and citizen participation as a central element of any global justice agenda.
Conclusion: From the shadow to the centre
Selby and Kagawa have suggested occupying ‘shadow spaces’ beyond the formal organisational structures in order to re-invent development education and escape the risky Faustian pact of limited traction on policy for the price of values and principles.  The examples of DEEEP and CONCORD show that whilst the institutional setting of DEEEP might indeed provide a more radical and flexible niche within the confederation, the inspiration sometimes comes out of the shadow.  Processes of strategic concern for the development sector of civil society, like the political narrative process of CONCORD, were largely facilitated, nurtured and shaped by the development educators within the confederation, specifically the DARE Forum and DEEEP.  The radicalisation and broadening of the DE concept actually allowed for a repositioning from the margins to the centre of the development discourse, illustrating Selby and Kagawa’s (2011: 26) point that ‘effectively nurtured, the dynamism of the shadow space can inform the formal dimension’.  The DEEEP example, though in its early stages, is attempting to avoid any kind of Faustian bargain and to demonstrate that DE can enhance its relevance to civil society precisely by sticking to its core values, instead of trading them away.
References
Andreotti, V (2006) 'Soft versus critical global citizenship education', Policy & Practice: A Development Education Review, Vol. 3, Autumn, pp. 40-51.
Bourn, D (2011) 'Discourses and Practices around Development Education: From Learning about Development to Critical Global Pedagogy', Policy & Practice: A Development Education Review, Vol. 13, Autumn, pp. 11-29.
Bourn, D (2008) Debates and Dialogues, London: Institute of Education, University of London.
Bryan, A (2011) ‘Another cog in the anti-politics machine? The “declawing” of development education’, Policy and Practice: A Development Education Review, Vol. 12, Spring, pp. 1-14.
Cascant, M and Kelbert, A (2012) ‘Global development: the new buzzword?’ Institute of Development Studies, available: http://participationpower.wordpress.com/2012/10/04/global-development-the-new-buzzword/ (accessed 22 July 2013).
DEEEP4 Vision and Mission Statement, available: http://www.deeep.org/images/deeep4_vision__mission.pdf (accessed 20 July 2013).
European Commission (2007) European Consensus on Development: The Contribution of Development Education and Awareness Raising, available:http://ec.europa.eu/development/icenter/repository/DE_Consensus-eductation_temp_EN.pdf (accessed 21 July 2013).
Fiedler, M (2011) ‘Thinking at the fault lines: development as shared responsibility’, Paper for Conference: Rethinking Development in an Age of Scarcity and Uncertainty: new values, voices and alliance for increased resilience, 19-22 September 2011, University of York, available: http://www.ideaonline.ie/sites/default/files/EADI_paper_Matthias_Fiedler_IDEA_final_Version.pdf (accessed 4 September 2013).
Freire, P (1995) ‘Some Issues: Neutrality, Respect for the Students, Epistemological Curiosity, and International Financial Aid’ in M de Figueiredo-Cowen and D Gastaldo (eds.) Paulo Freire at the Institute, London: IOE.
Khoo, S (2011) 'The Shifting Policy Landscape of Development Education', Policy & Practice: A Development Education Review, Vol. 13, Autumn, pp. 1-10.
Melamed, C and Samman, E (2013) Equity, Inequality and Human Development in a post-2015 Framework, United Nations Development Programme Research Paper.
Murphy, C (2011) ‘Challenges and Considerations for Embedding an African Perspective in Development Education’, Policy & Practice: A Development Education Review, Vol. 13, Autumn, pp. 49-61.
Naberhaus, M (2011) Effective change strategies for the Great Transition: five leverage points for civil society organizations: SmartCSOs Report, available:http://www.smart-csos.org/publications/category/16-smart-csos-report (accessed 25 July 2013).
New Economics Foundation (2010), ’21 hours: why a shorter working week can help us all to flourish in the 21st century’, London: NEF, available:http://dnwssx4l7gl7s.cloudfront.net/nefoundation/default/page/-/files/21_Hours.pdf (accessed 25 July 2013).
Selby, D and Kagawa, F (2011) ‘Development education and education for sustainable development: are they striking a Faustian bargain?’, Policy and Practice: A Development Education Review, Vol. 12, Spring, pp. 15-31.
Shutt, C (2009) Changing the world by changing ourselves: reflections from a bunch of BINGOs, Institute of Development Studies, Practice Paper No.3.
Sumner, A and Wiemann, J (2012) How can development studies survive globalisation? Reflections on the DSA-EADI 2011 Conference, Draft discussion.
Trócaire (2011) Leading Edge 2020: Critical Thinking on the Future of International Development, Maynooth, Ireland: Trócaire, available:http://www.trocaire.org/sites/trocaire/files/pdfs/policy/LeadingEdge2020websizedfinal.pdf (accessed 25 July 2013).

Tobias Troll is project manager of DEEEP, an initiative of CONCORD, the European Confederation of Development NGOs.  He is involved in global justice, citizens’ engagement and global learning as expert, trainer, facilitator and advocate for more than 10 years.  He holds a Master’s degree in Communication from the University of Arts in Berlin and is currently undertaking an MA in Development Education at the Institute of Education, University of London.  He publishes a blog on global learning and global citizenship at http://globalwh.at.
Amy Skinner is the Research Officer at DEEEP. She holds a Master’s degree in Development Education from the Institute of Education, University of London and a BA in International Relations and Development Studies from the University of Sussex.  She has previously worked within several development NGOs in Brussels and as an educational practitioner within the field of human rights education and global education in Slovenia, where she recently carried out research on the perception and implementation of global education within the formal school system. 
Cite article as: Troll, T and Skinner, A (2013) 'Catalysing the "Shadow Spaces": Challenging Development Discourse from within the DEEEP Project', Policy & Practice: A Development Education Review, Vol. 17, Autumn, pp. 90-102.

Thursday 23 January 2014

Development Education and Education in International Development Policy: Raising Quality through Critical Pedagogy and Global Skills

Development Education and Education in International Development Policy: Raising Quality through Critical Pedagogy and Global Skills

Amy SKINNER, Nicole BLUM and Douglas BOURN

ABSTRACTS

Development education is an approach to learning that questions dominant paradigms of development and inspires citizen- and community-driven change towards a world of greater social justice. This article provides an overview of development education and reflects on the extent to which development education principles are currently reflected in, or missing from, mainstream educational policies pursued within an international development framework. In particular, the article addresses the issue of quality in education  one of the key current debates within international education policy  and suggests that, through its critical pedagogy and focus on the development of global skills, development education has a significant contribution to make to these debates. The article suggests that greater collaboration between the field of development education and international education policy could facilitate the creation of an agenda that focuses on education quality and learning processes, as opposed to the current preoccupation with education access and outcomes.
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INDEX TERMS

Mots-clés thématiques :

éducationéducation au développement

Thematic keywords :

educationdevelopment education
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FULL TEXT

1. Introduction

1Development and aid programmes around the world have always needed public endorsement, either in the form of voluntary donations or through the political support of taxpayers for government funding. Beginning in the 1960s, educators and campaigners in many industrialised countries began to encourage greater understanding of development and aid through a range of programmes and campaigns, which came to be known as 'development education', aimed at audiences in the Global North. Much of this early practice used an uncritical view of development and economic growth to educate what was perceived to be a largely ignorant or disinterested public, with the goal of ‘open[ing] up hearts and minds, as well as the purses, to the problem of poverty in countries overseas’ (Black, 1992,102).
2While it began as a field largely oriented around NGO practice and campaigns, the theory underpinning development education has since evolved through direct contact with social movements and solidarity groups around the world, as well as engagement with the work of critical educationalists such as Paulo Freire (Cronkhite, 2000, 152; Hartmeyer, 2008, 36). By the 1990s, these influences had resulted in the creation of a strong critical pedagogy within development education which, in turn, resulted in new approaches to its educational practice. This includes, for instance, an emphasis on developing partnerships between educators and learners in the Global North and Global South; the promotion of social justice, empathy and solidarity; a commitment to participatory and transformative learning processes, with an emphasis on dialogue and experience; and a critique of dominant power relations and media messages about development that portray peoples from the Global South as helpless victims.
3Work in the field of development education, however, has run largely parallel to educational debates within international development policy and practice, with relatively little interaction between the two. This is perhaps partly the result of a problem of recognition and collaboration from those involved in the development education and those focused on education within an international development framework (i.e. in low and middle-income contexts). In this paper, we argue that this represents a lost opportunity for collaborative engagement with a number of important issues in contemporary international education policy and practice.
4One key areas of international debate, for instance, revolves around the development and implementation of initiatives and agendas such as Education For All (EFA) and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). In particular, it has been frequently argued that international efforts have focused far too narrowly on increasing access to formal education, without attending to the quality of learning actually taking place in schools. In other words, there has been ‘a failure to ensure that schooling actually leads to education’, resulting in ‘ a need to recapture the broad understanding of education and its purpose in future goals and frameworks’ (United Nations, 2013,1). These critiques highlight the need for policy and practice to attend not just to learning outcomes, but also to the learning process and the role of pedagogy in providing quality education.
5Linked to these educational policy discussions is a large body of academic work from disciplines such as development studies, development education and anthropology that has critiqued international development, and by extension education, initiatives and agendas for their tendency to rely on a ‘Western’ view of what constitutes ‘development’. Authors such as Amartya Sen, Martha Nussbaum, Vanessa Andreotti, Arturo Escobar, Robert Chambers and James Ferguson have argued for a range of alternative conceptualisations of the term capable of providing space for indigenous and local knowledges, diverse understandings of what constitutes a ‘good life’, and acknowledgement of the effects of unequal global relationships.
6This shift in academic discourse has also run parallel to a shift in international development policy, which is increasingly moving away from an idea of ‘development’ being organised for the Global South by actors in the Global North, towards a more holistic idea of ‘global development’, or ‘one world development’ (Sumner and Wiemann, 2012; Cascant and Kelber, 2012), which takes the interdependent nature of global relationships into account. This has been accompanied by increasing questioning of the role of aid and donors in promoting development, as well as a broader paradigm shift from a focus on the provision of aid towards an emphasis on global social justice.
7Similar to the debates on educational policy outlined above, this perspective also highlights the need for development policy and practice to attend to the processes of development, rather than pre-determined targets or outcomes. This requires a move from assessing development according to simplistic measurements (e.g. the number of children enrolled in school as a measure of access) to exploration of the learning processes that take place in schools, assessments of what constitutes ‘quality’ education in particular contexts, and the wider social and economic benefits for learners.
8Development education, with its global outlook, emphasis on social justice and focus on critical pedagogy and processes of learning has a strong contribution to make to all of these debates. It is particularly relevant in the contemporary context, characterized by an increasing recognition of the fact that ‘education is pivotal for development in a rapidly changing world’ and the need to place greater emphasis on the social role of education in enabling ‘people to fulfill their individual potential and to contribute to the economic, political and social transformation of their countries’ (UNESCO, 2013b,1-2) – areas which have not yet been sufficiently addressed within the MDG framework.
9The following discussion evaluates the extent to which key principles from development education are currently reflected in, or missing from, mainstream educational policies pursued within an international development framework, and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in particular. It begins with an overview of the principles underpinning development education theory and practice, and suggests some of the historical and ideological reasons underlying the failure of mainstream development debates and discourses to take up its insights. The authors then set out two key areas in which development education can substantively inform the post-2015 international education agenda: pedagogical approaches to learning about global issues, and debates about global skills. Taken together, the authors argue that these represent a significant contribution to global debates about education quality and how it might be encouraged through policy. We suggest, therefore, that much greater collaboration and discussion is needed between development educators and those working on education in low- and middle-income country contexts.

2. Development Education and its (Missing) Links to Development Discourse

10As a body of educational work, the field of development education has its historical roots in both European academic institutions and NGOs. Recent theory and practice in the field draws on a range of work by academics and thinkers from a variety of contexts around the world, and there is growing evidence of a diverse range of perspectives on development education deriving from a plethora of organisations (e.g. NGOs, government initiatives) anchored in particular national contexts (see Dudková, 2008; Helin, 2009; Ishii, 2003; Knutsson, 2011; Rasaren, 2009; Reagan, 2006). A detailed description of the diverse totality of discussions and practices in this international field is not possible within the space of this short paper and, as such, the following section sets out our own perspective – as UK researchers with strong links to research and practitioner colleagues around the world – on the key principles of development education theory and practice.
11In particular, we suggest that there is an emerging consensus amongst NGOs and academics regarding the main constituents of this body of practice. This can be summarised as follows:
Developing an understanding of the globalised world
Developing an understanding of links between our own lives and those of people throughout the world, local-global interdependencies and power relations, global and local development and environmental challenges, and issues of identity and diversity in multicultural contexts
This understanding is developed through:
A values based approach to learning
A learning approach based on values of justice, equality, inclusion, human rights, solidarity, and respect for others and for the environment
Participatory and transformative learning process
Methodologies are active and learner-centred, participatory and reflective, experiential, and involve multiple perspectives and aim to empower the learner
Developing competencies of critical (self) reflection
A learning process relevant to development in a globalised world develops the skills to evaluate and reflect on the learner's place, role and responsibility in their community and the wider world, to change perspectives and critically scrutinise their own attitudes, stereotypes and points of view, to form their own opinion, to make autonomous and responsible choices, to participate in decision-making processes, and to learn how to learn
Supporting active engagement
This work implicitly and explicitly addresses and investigates attitudes and behaviours (of ourselves, and of others), particularly those that encourage and discourage responsible and informed action and engagement in a more just and sustainable world
The development of the above mentioned skills, values, attitudes and processes of engagement aims to:
Active local and global citizenship
Empower people to participate in public affairs, strengthen civil society and foster a living democracy, enhance citizens' active involvement and engagement for social change within their local communities, and promote a sense of global citizenship and of co-responsibility at the global level
Source : adapted from Rajacic et al., 2010, 118.
12As such, it is a pedagogy that includes influences from a range of theorists and practitioners from around the world (Andreotti, 2011; Bourn, 2008; Cronkhite, 2000), including, significantly, a number of thinkers from the Global South, such as Paulo Freire (Brazil), Ajay Kumar (India), and Catherine Odora Hoppers (South Africa).
13Paulo Freire's emancipatory and participatory approach to learning (often referred to as 'popular education'), which prepares students for social change as well as active participation in democratic processes, has had a particularly strong influence on theories and practices of development education. Ajay Kumar, Associate Professor of Development Education at Jawaharlal Nehru University in India, has taken Freire’s thinking forward through the assertion that development education must be concerned with:
‘how learning, knowledge and education can be used to assist individuals and groups to overcome educational disadvantage, combat social exclusion and discrimination, and challenge economic and political inequalities – with a view to securing their own emancipation and promoting progressive social change’ (2008, 41).
14Kumar goes on to suggest that development education is a form of emancipatory and dialogical learning based on “critical humanist pedagogy” (2008). Such dialogical education, he suggests, is where learners collaboratively pose problems, enquire and seek solutions. This approach builds on Freire’s notions of teachers and students being co-investigators in an open and ongoing enquiry, and is combined with Gandhian notions of education aimed at liberating us from servitude and instilling mutual respect and trust.
15Another key strand of thinking comes from Catherine Odora Hoppers, Professor of Development Education at the University of South Africa, who raises the important question of the privileging of certain knowledges at the expense of others. In particular, she emphasises the importance of valuing a variety of knowledges, particularly indigenous knowledge systems and, in doing so, explicitly engaging with the multiplicity of worlds and forms of life (Odora Hoppers, 2008 and 2010). She further argues that the focus of development education should be not on learners’ competency to adapt to the current state of globalization, but the destabilization of the homogenization of diverse forms of knowledge.
16Development education practices have consistently emphasised the importance of promoting the voices of the oppressed and ensuring that those most directly affected by international development policies are heard and understood (Andreotti, 2008). Central to this approach is a recognition of the role that power and ideology plays in determining what and how education is delivered, how knowledge is constructed and interpreted, the importance of understanding dominant and subordinate cultures and of looking at the root causes of issues as well as the broader social context (Giroux, 2005; McLaren, 2009; Andreotti, 2008).
17In a sense, development education can be considered a 'pedagogy of global justice', as its questioning and critically reflective nature inevitably raises a desire amongst learners to bring about positive social change. Development education's critical pedagogical perspective empowers learners to further economic, political and social change, and therefore could make a valuable contribution to the global drive to secure quality education for all. This also highlights a clear connection between development education and development more broadly, in that aspects of the theoretical foundation of development education have also had a powerful influence on theories of participation and empowerment within development practice. In the 1980s, for example, Freire’s ideas were part of an emerging critique of development from Latin American theorists.
18The lack of practical synergy between the fields is perhaps partly the result of a lack of recognition and collaboration from those involved in both development education and education in low- and middle-income contexts. While there are a variety of perspectives represented amongst academics, policy makers and practitioners in both fields, there is a tendency for mainstream development discourses to view development education as an approach to promoting charity amongst affluent audiences in the Global North, with correspondingly little relevance to the Global South. Similarly, some recent research in development education has tended to see 'development' (or 'the development industry') from a critical, post-colonial stance which has perhaps led to limited engagement with mainstream development discussion and debate (Andreotti, 2008; Bryan and Bracken, 2011; Jefferess 2008). This suggests that, in order to generate innovative thinking about international education and development policy and practice in the future, there is a real need for greater engagement and collaboration on both sides,.
19In particular, we argue that development education has a significant role to play in the development of effective learning, skills, global engagement and critical thinking amongst young people around the world. The nature of globalisation demands that educational programmes in all countries prepare young people to understand global relationships and concerns, cope with complex problems and live with rapid change and uncertainty. Insufficient recognition of the importance of these issues in international education and development policy, not to mention research, undermines international efforts to engage all citizens around the world (and not just those in the Global North) with development processes and debates.

3. Reflections on the Importance of Quality in Education

20International policy and initiatives related to education in low- and middle-income country settings have historically focused on increasing access to schooling and the provision of educational infrastructure and measureable ‘inputs’, such as schools, teachers and textbooks, which were perceived to lead to improvements in basic education (Lewin, 2007, 4-5). This emphasis on provision rested on an assumption that ‘development’ – widely viewed as synonymous with economic growth – would result from increased enrolment and access to basic education. It also resulted in an instrumentalist and technical view of education focused primarily on establishing a universalized, global education infrastructure, often at the expense of attention to the quality of the education actualy provided in diverse contexts around the world. It has also meant that international agendas have often been implicitly driven by a perceived need for more education per se, rather than better quality education.
21Such instrumentalist approaches to development have been widely criticised for neglecting to account for the complex social and cultural dimensions of human existence (Sen,1999; Nussbaum,2011; Escobar,1994; Chambers,1997; Ferguson, 1990). As a result, a range of countervailing efforts in international policy have since attempted to address the complex social dimensions of education and development – including work on gender equality, sustainability and educational quality. Research and policy on quality, in particular, have sought to formulate improved ways of understanding what this might mean in various contexts (Alexander, 2008; Delors,1996). Unfortunately, the pressure of indicators, targets and measurements has often ‘stripped’ educational goals down to enrolment rates, completion rates, gender parity indexes (Mochizuki, 2012) and basic numeracy and literacy targets.
22There is a substantial academic literature related to quality, but the 2005 Global Monitoring Report – The Quality Imperative (2005,2) – presents a key policy statement about the concept. It defines two key dimensions of quality: the first relating to the development of learners’ cognitive development, and the second to ‘education’s role in promoting values and attitudes of responsible citizenship’. Clearly the latter element is far more difficult to monitor and assess, with the result that although there is broad support for more comprehensive approaches to addressing quality, cognitive development is often prioritized at the expense of the crucial values and skills needed to play an active and responsible role in society.
23This indicates a need to reaffirm the social purpose of education, placing an emphasis on the learning processes themselves, rather than inputs and outputs (Alexander, 2008; Barrett, 2009). Key to this is gaining an understanding of how education equips learners to understand and shape not only development processes but also the broader impact of globalization on their lives. As Mochizuki (2012,2) highlights, what matters is promoting ‘learning achievement that correlates with development both at individual and collective levels’. This perspective aligns well with the principles of development education, and can provide important insights into pedagogical approaches and skills that support development at both of these levels.
  • 1  Its key concerns, therefore, also parallel debates on the links between quality and education with (...)
24Indeed, in many national contexts, development education and related approaches (identified by various names, including global citizenship education, global learning, education for sustainable development, etc.) actively challenge the idea that ‘education’ is driven by inputs and its success measured by objective outcomes, such as enrolment or completion rates. Rather, as outlined above, development education efforts focus on teaching approaches that encourage critical thinking skills, exposure to multiple perspectives and an awareness of global concerns. Development education therefore is not aimed at delivering fixed bodies of knowledge (e.g. information about development issues), but rather is a holistic approach to learning that gives equal weight to the development of knowledge, values and skills relevant to learners’ lives.1
25While these approaches are becoming increasingly integrated into school curriculums and educational agendas in higher-income country contexts around the world, pressure from international aid funders to prioritise access to ‘basic education’ has resulted in these approaches being sidelined in low- and middle-income contexts. This leaves little room for learners in such contexts to develop the meaningful knowledge and understanding required to live and work in a globalising world.
  • 2  See the UN Secretary-General's Global Initiative on Education,  http://www.globaleducationfirst.or(...)
26Such contrasting approaches to education in the ‘North’ and ‘South’ also contribute to the continuance of global inequalities, thus working directly against the aims of ‘one world development’. It is therefore crucial to ensure that learners around the world are given equal opportunity to develop the skills, values and knowledges needed to tackle global (and local) challenges. This strongly resonates with the recently launched UNESCOEducation First Initiative, which brings global citizenship and transformative learning to the fore. According to Ban Ki Moon, founder of the initiative, 'Education gives us a profound understanding that we are tied together as citizens of the global community, and that our challenges are interconnected'.2 The subsequent section explores the potential contribution of development education, and its emphasis on pedagogy and global skills, to realising this global vision of education.

4. The Contribution of Development Education to Debates on Quality: Bringing Pedagogy and Global Skills to the Fore

27Perhaps one of the most challenging aspects of this 'global vision' is the often harsh realities of trying to implement it. As both EFA and the MDGs were intended to address a range of complex social, economic and environmental concerns, the need to achieve 'measurable' outcomes has led to a preoccupation with targets and indicators. This has had a signficant impact on efforts aimed at those dimensions of education and development – namely quality – that are less easily 'measureable'. The UNESCO Quality Imperative report suggests that 'knowledge and cognitive skills…have received the lion's share of attention in assessment execises that have provided internationally comparable data' because they are relatively value-neutral compared to other educational goals and hence more amenable to measurement through standardised testing (Barrett, 2009,7). Similarly, EFA Goal 6 refers to ‘improving all aspects of the quality of education… so that recognized and measurable outcomes are achieved by all, especially in literacy, numeracy and essential life skills’ (UNESCO, 2000,17; emphasis added). Cognitive outcomes, which are easier to measure than other elements of quality education, are therefore often favoured over key issues such as pedagogy, life skills and meeting learners’ social and affective needs. In other words, ‘quality has tended to be conceived not as what it actually is but as how it can be measured’ (Alexander, 2008,3).
28With respect to pedagogy specifically, this tendency to focus on measurement has resulted in:
‘[A] recurrent tendency in the literature on education for development: making pedagogy fit the available measures rather than the measures fit the pedagogy. Pedagogy is defined as a controllable input rather than as a process whose dynamic reflects the unique circumstances of each classroom and which is therefore variable and unpredictable; and the only aspects of pedagogy which are admitted as ‘inputs’ are those which can be measured’ (Alexander, 2008, 7-8).
29Discussion and initiatives related to skills have been similarly affected. EFA Goal 3, for instance, aims to develop ‘life skills’ for young people and adults, yet it has received only limited attention due to both the vagueness of the goal and uncertainty as to how to measure it (UNESCO, 2012,24). In 2012, an EFA global monitoring report on skills was specially commissioned to address these concerns. Central to that report is the conviction that if countries are to grow and prosper in a 'rapidly changing world they need to pay even greater attention to developing a skilled workforce' (UNESCO, 2012, 23). Debate continues, however, as to what kinds of skills should be prioritised, and how.
30These (often negative) effects of a heavy emphasis on measurement are being recognised in the task of setting priorities for the post-2015 development framework. Sumner and Tiwari (Barrett, 2009, 9), for instance, argue that there should be a shift away from the ‘quantitative, physiological, material consumption set of poverty measures’ underlying the MDGs to focus on process goals influenced by a well-being, capability-enhancing and value-based approach to development. Should post-2015 development goals 'define human development outcomes, or opportunities to achieve outcomes?' (Karver et al., 2012, 3; emphasis added). If the latter, educational goals will need to give much greater attention to learning environments, learning processes and pedagogy. This would mean that 'education is not only expected to enhance employability or livelihoods at the individual level and economic development at the national level but also to develop democratic values and responsible citizenship behaviour that contribute to stable and peaceful communities and nations' (Barrett, 2009, 9).
31While there is ever greater recognition of the need to focus on pedagogy and learning, and the development of critical approaches to education that incorporate diverse perspectives and skills, uncertainty remains, however, about precisely how to achieve this in practical terms. The following section highlights how development education’s focus on critical pedagogy and global skills could help to move these discussions forward.

4.1. Critical Pedagogy

32Development education adopts a pedagogical approach that enables learners to challenge their own assumptions and come to understand issues from diverse perspectives. This critical approach draws on the work of theorists such as Paulo Freire, bell hooks and Henry Giroux. At the heart of Freire’s approach is an emphasis on learners’ ability to think critically about their lives and circumstances. This allows them to recognize the connections between their individual concerns and experiences and the wider social contexts in which they are embedded. Such a commitment to critical thinking has significant implications for pedagogy; it is about recognising competing views and vocabularies, and opening up new forms of knowledge and creative spaces (Giroux, 2005). This approach is focused on learning that is open and participatory, but also deeply political, and incorporates a recognition of power. It also requires learners and teachers to actively collaborate in the learning process (hooks, 1994).
33A concrete example of the use of this approach in practice is the Open Spaces for Dialogue and Enquiry (OSDE) project. It works to create an open and safe space for learners to ‘engage critically with their own and different perspectives’ (OSDE, 2006) on a range of issues. This methodology has also been developed into a web-based programme, ‘Through Other Eyes’, which translates post-colonial theory into critical pedagogical practice by employing a variety of educational methods to enable learners to ‘identify and understand how different groups understand issues related to development and their implications for the development agenda and to critically examine these interpretations’ (Andreotti and De Souza, 2008, 23). This is crucial to avoiding the inadvertent reinforcement of ‘notions of the supremacy and universality of “our” (Western) ways of seeing and knowing, which can undervalue other knowledge systems and reinforce unequal relations of dialogue and power’ (Andreotti and De Souza, 2008, 23).
34We argue that such critical approaches to pedagogy are relevant to learners throughout the world, not just those in high-income contexts. Given that the post-2015 development agenda ‘is expected to broaden its scope beyond poverty reduction and economic growth to include social and political challenges such as tackling environmental degradation, responding to climate change, promoting tolerance, democracy and good governance, and ensuring peace and security’ (UNESCO, 2013b, 2), education which incorporates these kinds of critical and reflective pedagogical approaches to learning has the potential to make a key contribution.

4.2. Global Skills

35Whilst no one will dispute the value of increased numeracy and literacy skills in principle, relatively little attention has been paid thus far to the global dimension of skills development (King, 2011; UNESCO, 2012). International policy has also often failed to take into account the global context in which individual nations develop skills programmes for their citizens.
36The concept of 'global skills', on the other hand, makes the relationship between globalisation and the skills required to cope with it explicit, and is a key part of development education. It encompasses a broad and deep conceptualisation of skills, going beyond the numeracy, literacy and technical skills needed for work to include broader social and intercultural skills that both benefit the workplace and enable people to make a positive contribution to society. Key to the development of this broader range of skills is appreciation of the social, economic and cultural context within which they are developed: a context which 'recognises the nature of society, its cultural base, its rapidly changing economic forces and the challenges of dealing with the unknown' (Bourn, 2011, 14).
37The concept addresses people's need for skills to understand and critically engage with the impact of globalisation on their own lives and communities, to deal with uncertainty and insecurity, to be able to critically reflect on their own values base, and to make a positive contribution to society. Economic development is often considered one of the key drivers in skill development, but in debates regarding 'global skills', it is vital to give adequate consideration to social as well as economic needs.
38Global skills could therefore be said to encompass the following:
  • An ability to communicate and work with people from a range of social and cultural backgrounds
  • Critical thinking to question and reflect upon a range of social, economic and cultural influences on the learners' life
  • Openness to a range of voices and perspectives from around the world
  • Willingness to engage in society, resolve problems and seek solutions
  • Recognition and understanding of the impact of globalisation on people’s lives and the ability to make sense of a rapidly changing world
  • Willingness to play an active role in society at local, national and international level (Bourn, 2011, 13).
39This perspective draws together not only contemporary international concerns related to skills development, but also wider discussions regarding the nature and promotion of 'quality' learning. As a recent UNESCO statement argues, for example:
‘….[T]he notion of “learning” in the education and development discourse cannot be reduced to learning outcomes and their measurement. It should be broadly conceived and comprehensive. It should focus on learning goals, contents and processes as well as on outcomes. It should consider the effective acquisition of foundational skills and transferable competences, as well as the relevance of learning for individuals, their families and communities, and for society at large’ (UNESCO, 2013a, 5).
40It is clear that globalisation poses questions not only about what is taught and which skills are developed, but how. This reminds us that the broader pedagogical environment is to determing the development of skills amongst learners. Many employers feel that new entrants to the labour market lack transferable skills, pointing out that such skills cannot be learned from a textbook, but must be developed through quality education. Employers require people who are able to 'deploy their knowledge to solve problems, take the initiative and communicate with team members, rather than just follow prescribed routines' (UNESCO, 2012, 28).
41We argue that incorporating the concept of 'global skills' within discussions of skills development policy and initiatives post-2015 provides a means of bridging the tensions between economic/work oriented skills and social justice oriented skills that have, until how, undermined attempts to achieve EFA Goal 3.

5. Taking the Discussion Forward

42As outlined above, indications of changes within the discourse of the international development sector towards the notion of 'one world development' – as opposed to binary divisions of 'North' and 'South' – and a corresponding focus on process- rather than outcome-related post-2015 development goals, must be reflected in the international education agenda. Attention is currently being drawn to education quality and the learning processes in order to address, post-2015, the inadequacies of current EFA and education MDGs overly preoocupied with education access and outcomes. Furthermore, instrumentalist and technical views of education are increasingly being complemented by acknowledgement of the pivotal social role of education in equipping learners with the knowledge, skills and values to play an active part in transforming the world around them for the better (UNESCO, 2013b and the Education First Initiative website).
  • 3  See http://www.globaleducationfirst.org/220.htm.(...)
43The appreciation of the importance of education for development illustrates a gradual convergence between the key concerns and approaches of development education and international policy for education in low- and middle-income contexts. This is clearly demonstrated by the Education First Initiative, which states: 'It is not enough for education to produce individuals who can read, write and count. Education must be transformative and bring shared values to life. It must cultivate an active care for the world and for those with whom we share it'.3
44Overall, then, the potential of education to equip individuals and societies to deal with uncertainty regarding current and future global challenges (i.e. climate change, poverty, inequalities, etc.) and to understand and critically examine processes of development and globalization, is being increasingly recognized. Due to its long history of implementing transformative educational approaches with a global dimension, development education can make a strong contribution to these discussions, particularly with respect to critical pedagogy and global skills,. There is therefore a need for greater dialogue between actors in the fields of development education and education in low- and middle-income countries in order to ensure appropriate strategies and approaches are set for the future.

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NOTES

1  Its key concerns, therefore, also parallel debates on the links between quality and education with respect to sustainable development (Pigozzi, 2007), as well as those regarding education quality and climate change (Bangay and Blum, 2010).
2  See the UN Secretary-General's Global Initiative on Education,  http://www.globaleducationfirst.org/about.html
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REFERENCES

Electronic reference

Amy SKINNER, Nicole BLUM and Douglas BOURN, « Development Education and Education in International Development Policy: Raising Quality through Critical Pedagogy and Global Skills », International Development Policy | Revue internationale de politique de développement [Online], 5.2 |  2013, Online since 12 November 2013, connection on 23 January 2014. URL : http://poldev.revues.org/1654 ; DOI : 10.4000/poldev.1654
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ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Amy SKINNER

DEEEP4 Research Officer, CONCORD European NGO Confederation for Relief and Development. Amy Skinner holds a Masters in Development Education and a BA in International Relations and Development Studies from the University of Sussex, UK. She has previously worked with several development NGOs in Brussels and development education NGOs in Slovenia, where she carried out research within the formal school system.

Nicole BLUM

Senior Lecturer in Development Education, Development Education Research Centre, Institute of Education (London, UK). Dr. Nicole Blum lectures and conducts research on development education, environmental education and education for sustainable development. Her research interests also include pedagogy and learning in development education, internationalisation and global perspectives in higher education, the ethnography of education, and access to and participation in education. She has worked and conducted research in Costa Rica, Guatemala, India, the United States and the United Kingdom.

Douglas BOURN

Director of the Development Education Research Centre, Institute of Education (London, UK). Prior to being Director of the Centre, Dr. Douglas Doug was Director of the UK Development Education Association (1993-2006) and has been an advisor and consultant to a number of European countries in the formation of their development education strategies. He has written extensively on development education, global perspectives in education, global citizenship and education for sustainable development. He is also editor of the International Journal for Development Education and Global Learning.
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