Monthly Archives: March 2025

Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 302 of 406)

Rassool, Naz (1998). Postmodernity, Cultural Pluralism and the Nation-State: Problems of Language Rights, Human Rights, Identity and Power. Language Sciences, v20 n1 p89-99 Jan. Argues that language provides not only a central identity variable but also constitutes a key means by which people can either gain access to power or be excluded from the right to exercise control over their lives. Argues that, if language is materially and culturally rooted, issues of language rights cannot be addressed outside of social policy. (22 references) (Author/CK)…

Jones, Franklin Ross (1976). The Commitment of Urban Schools to Human Development Goals. This paper is concerned with the commitment of urban schools to human development goals. The urban school systems examined here are represented by localities with populations above 100,000 in each of the states on the eastern seaboard from Virginia to Florida. The vehicle for examining the relationship of school systems to human development goals is the current school budgets of 1975-76 and the evidence of curricular offerings and services. Human development goals in the Western World generally embrace the following structures, organizations, etc. that serve to evaluate in the making of a society. A society can be defined as a convivial social group. It is the opposite of industrial productivity. Its goals involve those things which assist the human being to fully enjoy basic rights. In relation to the school, human development goals are obvious when they afford a climate for human dignity, evince concern for individual welfare, provide appropriate stimulation, give opportunity to…

Cattaneo, Zaira; Herbert, Andrew; Mattavelli, Giulia; Papagno, Costanza; Silvanto, Juha (2011). The Role of the Human Extrastriate Visual Cortex in Mirror Symmetry Discrimination: A TMS-Adaptation Study. Brain and Cognition, v77 n1 p120-127 Oct. The human visual system is able to efficiently extract symmetry information from the visual environment. Prior neuroimaging evidence has revealed symmetry-preferring neuronal representations in the dorsolateral extrastriate visual cortex; the objective of the present study was to investigate the necessity of these representations in symmetry discrimination. This was accomplished by the use of state-dependent transcranial magnetic stimulation, which combines the fine resolution of adaptation paradigms with the assessment of causality. Subjects were presented with adapters and targets consisting of dot configurations that could be symmetric along either the vertical or horizontal axis (or they could be non-symmetric), and they were asked to perform a symmetry discrimination task on the targets while fixating the center of the screen. TMS was applied during the delay between the adapter and the test stimulus over one of four different sites: Left or Right V1/V2, or left or right… [Direct]

Jules, Tavis D. (2015). Educational Exceptionalism in Small (and Micro) States: Cooperative Educational Transfer and TVET. Research in Comparative and International Education, v10 n2 p202-222 Jun. Since 2002, the 15 member states of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) have shifted human resource development reforms from focusing on providing basic, mass primary and secondary education and limited tertiary education toward diverting resources to "Technical and Vocational Education and Training" (TVET) to accommodate labor mobility. This shift fixated on facilitating the creation of the Caribbean Single Market (CSM) in 2006, which was premised upon the free movement of service, capital, goods, people, and the right to establishment (ability of any CARICOM national to establish a business). The motivation was to create an optimal frontier at the regional level to aid in the development of the "ideal Caribbean person." This article will examine how CARICOM members relied upon the non-economic policy process of functional cooperation and the policy tool of what I call "cooperative educational transfer" at the regional level to move ideas and practices… [Direct]

Mickey, Melissa (1973). Developing a Plan for Affirmative Action–Human Rights Bibliography. Working Paper No. 3. As background for assessing the feasibility and desirability of program development in the area of human relations, a wide ranging literature search was conducted to locate materials which would be of use in designing, producing, and evaluating a human relations training program for the Medical Library Association. Information was uncovered in three different categories: (1) discussions of the possible forms the training could take, (2) discussions of actual programs used by other agencies, and (3) background materials which would be of use as a basis for the course designing process. Bibliographies were produced on the following topics: (1) Articles and books describing methods of laboratory education which are used to reduce racial prejudice; (2) literature on the case method of training personnel managers; (3) materials describing the specific problems of supervising minority group employees and the general problems of minority employment; (4) ERIC Research Reports selected from… [PDF]

Reynolds, Edwin W. (1989). Human Rights through Holocaust and Genocide Studies: Achievement and Challenges. (Daniel Roselle Lecture). Journal of the Middle States Council for the Social Studies, v11 p24-27 Fall. Discusses a curriculum on the Holocaust and genocide. Expresses the belief that Martin Luther King, Jr.'s dream of human equality can be a world dream. Argues that the curriculum is not a "Jewish" one, because it addresses examples of genocide from many cultures, and its authors are educators of various faiths. (SG)…

Musau, Paul M. (2003). Linguistic Human Rights in Africa: Challenges and Prospects for Indigenous Languages in Kenya. Language, Culture and Curriculum, v16 n2 p155-164. With reference to Kenya, the paper shows that although linguistic rights have been eloquently articulated in various charters and declarations, their implementation has been problematic. In Africa this has led to an imbalance of status between the former colonial languages and the indigenous ones. This imbalance is evident in the educational systems and in media practice. This state of affairs is attributed to lack of clear-cut democratic language policies, lack of programmes of policy implementation, negative attitudes towards indigenous languages and the complex language situation that obtains in many African countries. It is recommended that a guiding vision and a plan of action for implementing linguistic rights are necessary if linguistic justice is to prevail in Africa…. [Direct]

Nutbrown, Cathy (2013). Conceptualising Arts-Based Learning in the Early Years. Research Papers in Education, v28 n2 p239-263. This paper argues that, because young children's response to the world is primarily sensory and aesthetic, early years curriculum should give due attention to the arts. There is an urgent need to better conceptualise ways of working with young children in relation to the arts. The paper is based on three key and permeating ideas: first, that human beings need the arts for holistic development; second, that there have been many attempts to integrate the arts with other areas of learning in the early years; and third, a more robust and clearly articulated conceptualisation of arts-based learning in the early years is needed. The paper critically reviews the international literature relating to these three key areas and concludes that: early childhood education must pay due regard to the innate human need for aesthetics in the design of curricula; on the whole, young children's experience in the arts has not been nurtured in ways which support their artistically-attuned development; and… [Direct]

Gorin, Joanna S. (2014). Assessment as Evidential Reasoning. Teachers College Record, v116 n11. Background/Context: Principles of evidential reasoning have often been discussed in the context of educational and psychological measurement with respect to construct validity and validity arguments. More recently, Mislevy proposed the metaphor of assessment as an evidentiary argument about students' learning and abilities given their behavior in particular circumstances. An assessment argument consists of a claim one wants to make, typically about student learning, and evidence that supports that claim. From this perspective, the quality of our assessments are a function of both whether we have built our arguments about the right types of claims and whether we have collected sufficient persuasive evidence to support our claims. Purpose: This paper examines limitations of the dominant practice in educational assessment of the 20th century, which focuses on relatively simple claims and often rely on a single piece of evidence. This paper considers future educational assessment in… [Direct]

Kahne, Joseph (1996). Reframing Educational Policy: Democracy, Community, and the Individual. Advances in Contemporary Educational Thought, Volume 16. Rather than defining and debating particular goals, educational policymakers tend to focus on the technical issues surrounding educational practice. This book considers the social and ethical orientations that structure mainstream policy dialogues and the way in which adoption of some alternative social and ethical principles would change the form and focus of political debates. Chapters 2 through 4 describe four political and ethical approaches toward policymaking, policy analysis, and policy implementation: the utilitarian, the rights-based, the communitarian, and the humanist. These perspectives are used to examine the connections between educational and societal goals. The fifth and sixth chapters examine two contemporary policy issues, tracking and school choice, through the lens of each framework. A conclusion is that mainstream dialogue is shaped primarily by a utilitarian and rights focus on human capital development. Chapter 7 discusses the longitudinal research conducted…

Newland, Cherie; Rahman, Qazi; Smyth, Beatrice Mary (2011). Sexual Orientation and Spatial Position Effects on Selective Forms of Object Location Memory. Brain and Cognition, v75 n3 p217-224 Apr. Prior research has demonstrated robust sex and sexual orientation-related differences in object location memory in humans. Here we show that this sexual variation may depend on the spatial position of target objects and the task-specific nature of the spatial array. We tested the recovery of object locations in three object arrays (object exchanges, object shifts, and novel objects) relative to veridical center (left compared to right side of the arrays) in a sample of 35 heterosexual men, 35 heterosexual women, and 35 homosexual men. Relative to heterosexual men, heterosexual women showed better location recovery in the right side of the array during object exchanges and homosexual men performed better in the right side during novel objects. However, the difference between heterosexual and homosexual men disappeared after controlling for IQ. Heterosexual women and homosexual men did not differ significantly from each other in location change detection with respect to task or side of… [Direct]

Lane, Shannon R.; Lane-Toomey, Cara K. (2013). U.S. Students Study Abroad in the Middle East/North Africa: Factors Influencing Growing Numbers. Journal of Studies in International Education, v17 n4 p308-331 Sep. The political events of the last decade and the Arab Spring have made it more important than ever for Americans to understand the language, culture, and history of the Middle East/North Africa (MENA) region. Study abroad is one important method that can significantly increase American students' understanding of the Arabic language and the culture of MENA. During the past decade, the number of U.S. undergraduate students in the MENA region has increased dramatically, but there is still a great need for growth and understanding in this area. This research analyzes data from a cross-sectional survey and focus groups of U.S. undergraduate study abroad students to investigate the motivations, attitudes, and aspects of human capital that influence study abroad destination choice. These findings provide insight for policy makers, faculty, and international educators who want to expand students' options for study abroad and for students who are considering whether this avenue is right for… [Direct]

Assaf, Michal; Grimaldi, Adam S.; Jagannathan, Kanchana; Jordan, Kathryn C.; Parker, Beth A.; Pearlson, Godfrey D.; Thompson, Paul D. (2011). Effect of Exercise Training on Hippocampal Volume in Humans: A Pilot Study. Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, v82 n3 p585-591 Sep. The hippocampus is the primary site of memory and learning in the brain. Both normal aging and various disease pathologies (e.g., alcoholism, schizophrenia, and major depressive disorder) are associated with lower hippocampal volumes in humans and hippocampal atrophy predicts progression of Alzheimers disease. In animals, there is convincing evidence that exercise training increases hippocampal volume. A recent cross-sectional study in older humans demonstrated a positive relation between aerobic fitness and hippocampal volume. Moreover, a recent study found that a year of aerobic exercise training increases hippocampal volume by 2% in older adults. Accordingly, in this preliminary study the authors sought to confirm the direct effect of supervised exercise training on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) estimates of hippocampal volume in healthy humans. The preliminary results suggest a linear relation between changes in cardiorespiratory fitness and hippocampal volume such that large… [Direct]

Klerman, Jacob Alex (2010). Contracting for Independent Evaluation: Approaches to an Inherent Tension. Evaluation Review, v34 n4 p299-333 Aug. There has recently been discussion of whether independent contract evaluation is possible. This article acknowledges the inherent tension in contract evaluation and in response suggests a range of constructive approaches to improving the independence of contract evaluation. In particular, a clear separation between the official evaluation report and a contractor's own publication of analysis from the underlying evaluation appears to be a promising approach. In this approach, the funder would retain almost unfettered rights to the official contract report (including the right never to publish but not the right to change the contractor's text while leaving the contractor's authorship) and the contractor would retain clearly defined rights to publish any findings from the evaluation (subject only to the limitations of human subjects and proprietary data and some minimal notice)…. [Direct]

Nwanaju, Isidore U. (2016). The Aim of Philosophy of Religious Education in a Pluralist Society (Nigeria as an Example). Journal of Education and Practice, v7 n19 p107-113. The major aim and leitmotif of this paper is to highlight the Nigerian society and its diverse, multi-cultural and pluralist composition–a society which has experienced in the last fifty years, and is still experiencing fantastic and tremendous signs of growth in democracy, but which is also almost unsure of the right path and the correct decision to make to attain the expected height in all facets of national development, especially education as it relates to religious awareness. Apart from the observable and undeniable general educational backwardness, there is a huge lacuna in the area of dialogical encounter between the various ethnic, cultural, and religious groups constituting the country as a nation. Even the academia and the law enforcement agencies seem not actually well-prepared for the task of enlightening and guiding the populace on how to live together in a pluralist society like Nigeria. Pluralism should not be understood to mean godlessness or irreligiosity. On the… [PDF]

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Bibliography: Human Rights (Part 303 of 406)

Hinsdale, Mary Ann; And Others (1995). It Comes from the People: Community Development and Local Theology. The closing of local mines and factories collapsed the economic and social structure of Ivanhoe, Virginia, a small rural town once considered a dying community. This book is a case study that tells how the people of Ivanhoe organized to revitalize their town. It documents the community development process–a process that included hard work, a community consciousness raising experience that was intentionally sensitive to cultural and religious values, and many conflicts. It tells the story of the emergence and education of leaders, especially women, and the pain and joy of their growing and learning. Among these leaders is Maxine Waller, a dominant, charismatic woman who gave the townspeople inspiration and a sense of their capabilities and of their rights as human beings. Part I covers the community development process and includes chapters on historical background, community mobilization, confronting and using power, community education, using culture in community development,… [PDF]

Chechlacz, Magdalena; Humphreys, Glyn W.; Sui, Jie (2012). Dividing the Self: Distinct Neural Substrates of Task-Based and Automatic Self-Prioritization after Brain Damage. Cognition, v122 n2 p150-162 Feb. Facial self-awareness is a basic human ability dependent on a distributed bilateral neural network and revealed through prioritized processing of our own over other faces. Using non-prosopagnosic patients we show, for the first time, that facial self-awareness can be fractionated into different component processes. Patients performed two face perception tasks. In a face orientation task, they judged whether their own or others' faces were oriented to the left or right. In the \cross\ experiment, they judged which horizontal or vertical element in a cross was relatively longer while ignoring a task-irrelevant face presented as background. The data indicate that impairments to a distinct task-based prioritization process (when faces had to be attended) were present after brain damage to right superior frontal gyrus, bilateral precuneus, and left middle temporal gyrus. In contrast, impairments to automatic prioritization processes (when faces had to be ignored) were associated only with… [Direct]

Atwater, D. M.; And Others (1991). Building Local Labor Market Dynamics into Workforce 2000. Research Report No. 53. The Hudson Institute study, "Workforce 2000," created an awareness that labor markets are going to be dramatically different in the year 2000. The themes from Workforce 2000, events from the early 1990s, and the dynamics of local labor markets can be combined. At the analytical level, these three components form tracks that can be used to analyze the effectiveness of recruitment, hiring, training, and development. Workforce 2000 themes include a forecast that in the year 2000 there will be key shortages of skilled workers; divergent quality of life, income, and life prospects; and a culturally diverse work force. External key events include availability of skilled workers from Department of Defense cutbacks, the underrepresentation of females in higher decision-making jobs, and the challenge to seniority systems from the proposed Civil Rights Act of 1991. Human resource planning and forecasting models can be used to quantify specific job movements in local labor markets… [PDF]

Breen, Claire (2006). Age Discrimination and Children's Rights. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers One of the aims of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child is to accord due recognition to the fact that 'the child, by reason of his physical and mental immaturity, needs special safeguards and care, including appropriate legal protection, before as well as after birth". However, a question mark hangs over the extent to which "special safeguards and care' can negatively impact on the rights of the child and result in discrimination against the child in the guise of "his physical and mental immaturity". This volume explores the extent to which children's rights are secured at the national level; and the reasons why children's rights have or have not been recognised and secured by various states at the level of domestic law. It also explores the difficulties inherent in the accordance of rights to children in order to ascertain whether they do in fact derive from the particular nature of children or whether they mask a reluctance of states to… [Direct]

Dellatolas, Georges; Morange-Majoux, Francoise (2010). Right-Left Approach and Reaching Arm Movements of 4-Month Infants in Free and Constrained Conditions. Brain and Cognition, v72 n3 p419-422 Apr. Recent theories on the evolution of language (e.g. Corballis, 2009) emphazise the interest of early manifestations of manual laterality and manual specialization in human infants. In the present study, left- and right-hand movements towards a midline object were observed in 24 infants aged 4 months in a constrained condition, in which the hands were maintained closed, and in a free condition. A left-hand dominance for approach movements without contact with the object, and a right-hand dominance for reaching movements with object contact was observed in the free condition. In the constrained condition reaching movements of the right hand decreased dramatically. These results are interpreted as strong evidence of manual specialization in 4-month olds, with approach movements having a localization role and reaching movements announcing future right-hand dominance for prehension and object manipulation. (Contains 2 figures.)… [Direct]

Carmo, Mafalda, Ed. (2016). END 2016: International Conference on Education and New Developments. Conference Proceedings (Ljubljana, Slovenia, June 12-14, 2016). Online Submission We are delighted to welcome you to the International Conference on Education and New Developments 2016–END 2016, taking place in Ljubljana, Slovenia, from 12 to 14 of June. Education, in our contemporary world, is a right since we are born. Every experience has a formative effect on the constitution of the human being, in the way one thinks, feels and acts. One of the most important contributions resides in what and how we learn through the improvement of educational processes, both in formal and informal settings. Our International Conference seeks to provide some answers and explore the processes, actions, challenges and outcomes of learning, teaching and human development. Our goal is to offer a worldwide connection between teachers, students, researchers and lecturers, from a wide range of academic fields, interested in exploring and giving their contribution in educational issues. We take pride in having been able to connect and bring together academics, scholars, practitioners… [PDF]

Lim, Leonel (2014). Critical Thinking and the Anti-Liberal State: The Politics of Pedagogic Recontextualization in Singapore. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, v35 n5 p692-704. In concert with Singapore's ambitions of a global city well engineered to the human capital needs of the transnational knowledge economy, its schools in recent years have emphasized the teaching of critical thinking. Such efforts, however, are not without tensions and contradictions. Given that such a curricular ideal is underpinned by liberal discourses of democracy and autonomy, what form does it assume in a dominant one-party state with a deliberately weak and underdeveloped language of individual rights? In a "meritocratic" and highly stratified education system, what are the tensions involved in teaching all students what has traditionally been classified as "high-status" knowledge? This article draws upon Basil Bernstein's writings on pedagogic recontextualization and the relations between knowledge, curricular form, and ideology to examine the politics of teaching critical thinking in Singapore. Specifically, using ethnographic classroom data from a public… [Direct]

Rider, Sharon (2015). Human Freedom and the Philosophical Attitude. Educational Philosophy and Theory, v47 n11 p1185-1197. Attempts to describe the essential features of the Western philosophical tradition can often be characterized as "boundary work", that is, the attempt to create, promote, attack, or reinforce specific notions of the 'philosophical' in order to demarcate it as a field of intellectual inquiry. During the last century, the dominant tendency has been to delineate the discipline in terms of formal methods, techniques, and concepts and a given set of standard problems and alternative available solutions (although this element has been both present and at times highly influential at least since Plato). One vital feature of the philosophical tradition that has played a certain rather subterranean but nonetheless indispensable role, which I will discuss in this article, is that of repeatedly and stringently calling into question the conditions of its own possibility. The Cartesian tradition (including Kant, Husserl, Popper and Weber) shares with the anti-philosophers (say, Nietzsche… [Direct]

Goldrick-Rab, Sara (2012). Comments on Mike Rose's Essay \Rethinking Remedial Education and the Academic-Vocational Divide\. Mind, Culture, and Activity, v19 n1 p26-28. The struggle over whether all students have a right to a high-quality, affordable college education, or whether it is a privilege they must \earn\ through high test scores and parental savings for tuition, plays out daily in the so-called \remedial\ or \developmental\ classes. This article presents the author's comments on Mike Rose's essay \Rethinking Remedial Education and the Academic-Vocational Divide.\ For as Rose so clearly describes in the article, practitioners have deep and valid knowledge of what they must do. Executing the work as they describe it is another matter entirely. Many remedial approaches assume a one-way street–teacher teaches student–that alienates learners with real experience from the start. Rose's research and writing over many decades shows that students teach teachers as well–and in doing so, teach themselves. It is the belief in human capacity that \creates both instructional responses and institutional structures that limit human development for… [Direct]

Dolder-Holland, Tiffany; Fetter-Harrott, Alli; Whiteman, Rodney S. (2012). Policy, Power, and Predicaments: Negotiating Boundaries of Sexual Health and Curricular Leadership. Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, v15 n2 p24-40 Jun. Joe McGinnis, principal of Jackson High School, is caught in the conflict between community values, parents' rights, teacher speech, public health policy, and his own positioning within the community and faculty. He must decide whether and how to discipline a teacher and former mentor who, in the absence of a clear school district policy, supplied a student with information regarding sexual health. The parents claim the teacher exceeded her duties by providing morality education that contradicted parental and community values. The teacher asserts she acted in the best interest of the student's health and academic future. This case poses questions about professional ethics and morality, community governance and school health education policies, school human resource rules, and school power…. [Direct]

Dymally, Mervyn M.; Warner, Mary R. (1978). Obstacles to Health Care in the Black Community: The Denial of a Human Right. Journal of Intergroup Relations, 6, 3, 19-33, Jun 78. Although health care has never emerged as a leading issue in the civil rights struggle, there has been a relatively quiet, low key movement over the past ten years to address many of the health issues in the black community. Now, however, the movement is regressing. (Author/AM)…

Ray, Douglas (1986). Resources for Education: Human Rights and the Canadian System for Redistribution of Public Funds. Canadian Journal of Education, v11 n3 p353-63 Sum. Three aspects of potential maldistribution of public funds are examined here: whether rich Canadians find it necessary or worthwhile to send their children to private schools, whether poverty deprives citizens of educational services, and whether the cost of a special educational service determines if or where it will be available. (Author/JAZ)…

Pascu, Ioan Mircea; Voinea, Radu (1984). The Responsibilities of the Scientist in International Understanding, Co-Operation, Peace, and Human Rights. Higher Education in Europe, v9 n2 p26-33 Apr-Jun. A discussion of the responsibility of scientists as repositories of knowledge, as educators, and as citizens outlines some concerns of the scientific community for problems of peace and disarmament. It is noted that a recent common awareness of a common responsibility for society is evident in the intensity of scientific contacts. (MSE)…

Kontra, Miklos (2001). British Aid for Hungarian Deaf Education from a Linguistic Human Rights Point of View. Hungarian Journal of Applied Linguistics, v1 n2 p63-68. This paper discusses the issue of oral versus sign language in educating people who are deaf, focusing on Hungary, which currently emphasizes oralism and discourages the use of Hungarian Sign Language. Teachers of people who are hearing impaired are trained to use the acoustic channel and view signing as an obstacle to the integration of deaf people into mainstream Hungarian society. A recent news report describes how the British Council is giving children's books to a Hungarian college for teachers of handicapped students, because the college believes in encouraging hearing impaired students' speaking skills through picture books rather than allowing then to use sign language. One Hungarian researcher writes that the use of Hungarian Sign Language hinders the efficiency of teaching students who are hard of hearing, because they often prefer it to spoken Hungarian. This paper suggests that the research obscures the difference between medically deaf children, who will never learn to… [PDF]

Mock, Karen R. (1997). 25 Years of Multiculturalism–Past, Present and Future, Part II. Focus on Human Rights. Canadian Social Studies, v31 n4 p163-65 Sum. Evaluates the effect of multicultural education on racism in Canada. Maintains that racism is still an integral part of Canadian life and, in some instances, appears to be on the rise. Argues for a vigorous and consistent educational policy emphasizing multicultural and antiracist training. (MJP)…

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