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Education,
Asylum and the Non-Citizen Child: The Politics of Compassion and Belonging
 
Halleli Pinson, Madeleine
Arnot, and Mano Candappa
ISBN: 978-0-23052468-2
Published London: Palgrave Macmillan, April 2010
Palgrave: http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=279123
Macmillan: http://us.macmillan.com/educationasylumandthenoncitizenchild
Amazon: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Education-Asylum-Non-Citizen-Child-Compassion/dp/0230524680
 
This book draws on 10 years of empirical research to assess for the first time
the politics of compassion and belonging associated with immigration policy and
its impact on the education system in the UK. 
 
The authors expose significant
tensions between restrictive government asylum policies and the responses by
schools and local government to the presence of asylum- -seeking and refugee
children. They reveal a compassionate professionalism amongst teachers and an
emergent ‘new politics’ which challenges the forcible removal by government of
children to detention centres and the deportation of families. 
This innovative research exposes
the forms of exclusion which ‘non-citizen’ children experience within inclusive
schools and the ways in which the empathy of ‘citizen’ students towards those
seeking asylum is at risk of being overridden by defensive national identities.

This book is essential reading for courses on children’s rights, equality and
migration studies and for teachers and other professionals in the field of
refugee education, immigration and community and social work.
 
Reviews: 
 
Asylum-seeking and
refugee children have been largely invisible to the intellectual prism of the
sociology of education. Their presence dramatically confronts the traditional
role of the state of educating in loco parentis. Delivered with impeccable and
accessible writing, this book is a true eye opener’. - Professor
Carlos Alberto Torres, Director of the Paulo Freire Institute, University of
California, USA

 'Based on compelling empirical evidence, this volume offers
important insights into the moral integrity of pupils and teachers in the face
of hostile immigration policy. It is a vital contribution to current debates
internationally on the challenges to the integration of refugee and asylum
seeking children.' - Jo Boyden, Director of the Young Lives
Research Centre, University of Oxford, UK

'This is a bold, sophisticated and impressive book which presents a
careful and critical analysis of the position of asylum-seeking and refugee
children. The voices and experiences of the children form a central component
of the study and challenge everyone in education to live up to their inclusive
rhetoric and act to stop the inhumane and oppressive treatment that so many
asylum-seeking and refugee children experience on a daily basis.' - David
Gillborn, Professor of Critical Race Studies in Education, Institute of
Education, University of London, UK
 
The Authors:
HALLELI PINSON is Lecturer at Ben-Gurion University of the
Negev and Research Fellow at the Van-Leer Jerusalem Institute, Israel. Her
research focuses on young people's political identities, citizenship education
and social conflict and the interface between government immigration and
educational policy in the UK. She recently won the prestigious Alon Fellowship.
Her publications include Citizenship, Education and Social Conflicts. 

MADELEINE ARNOT is Professor of Sociology of Education at the University of
Cambridge, UK and Director of the Youth, Gender and Citizenship project in
Africa and South East Asia. She has published extensively on educational issues
relating to citizenship, social inequality and social justice. Her recent
publications include Gender Education and Equality in a Global Context and Educating the Gendered Citizen and articles on educational policy in
relation to teacher responses to asylum seeking students.

MANO CANDAPPA is Senior Research Officer at the Institute of Education,
University of London, UK. Her research focuses on childhoods, social care,
education, migration, the experiences of refugees and asylum–seeking children
and families. Recent publications include Education and Schooling for
Asylum-Seeking and Refugee Students in Scotland



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