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Co-designing a civics curriculum: young people, democratic deficit and political renewal in the EU

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 22:17 authored by Judith BessantJudith Bessant, Rys Farthing, Robert WattsRobert Watts
Contemporary discussion of the 'crisis in democracy' displays a tendency to see young people as the problem because they are 'apolitical', 'apathetic' and 'disengaged', or point to deficiencies in institutions deemed responsible for civic education. This discussion normally comes as a prelude to calls for more civics education. This article points to a renewal of politics at the hands of young people relying on new media, and draws on evidence like survey research, case studies and action research projects. This political renewal is occurring largely in response to the assumption of political elites that a 'politics-as-usual' will suffice to address the major political challenges of our time. Against the assumption that teachers, curriculum experts and policy-makers already know what kinds of knowledge and skills students need to become good citizens, we make a case for co-designing a contemporary citizenship curriculum with young people to be used for the professional development of policy-makers. We argue that such an intervention is likely to have a salutary educational effect on policy-makers, influence how they see young people's political engagement and how they set policy agendas. The article also canvasses the protocols such a project might observe.

History

Journal

Journal of Curriculum Studies

Volume

48

Issue

2

Start page

271

End page

289

Total pages

19

Publisher

Routledge

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 Taylor & Francis

Former Identifier

2006053381

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-06-02

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