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OverviewThis edited volume explores how mathematics education is re/configured in relation to its past, present, and future when the rhetoric of critical global citizenship education is being applied to diverse local settings. Drawing upon diverse theoretical and methodological traditions across the globe including countries in South America, Asia, Australia, and Europe, each chapter challenges and, eventually, troubles the wide circulation of a universal imagery of citizenship based on mathematical competence in not only curriculum, school reforms and policy but also in teaching and learning practices. Troubling the Euro-centric and global notions of citizenship and diversity, the book foregrounds local practices in mathematics education to portray a broader picture for the current problems of equity, social justice, and democracy. The book also engages with critical discussions on how ‘citizens’ and ‘noncitizen’ are being fabricated in the context of educational policies and specific mathematical practices. First of its kind, to trouble what is at stake when mathematics education is framed within the discourses of citizenship globally (through challenging and problematising what is understood as ‘normal’), this book will be of relevance to scholars, academics, and researchers in the field of sociology of education, anthropology of education, philosophy of education, mathematics education, citizenship studies, and international and comparative education. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Anna Chronaki (University of Thessaly, Greece) , Ayşe Yolcu (Hacettepe University, Turkey)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.770kg ISBN: 9780367672942ISBN 10: 0367672944 Pages: 308 Publication Date: 06 March 2025 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction: Rethinking Citizenship Enactment for Mathematics Education PART I: Troubling citizenship norms through conceptual ideals Chapter 1: Challenging The Need for Mathematics Education for Future Success: What If This is The Best Version of Myself? Chapter 2: An Essay to Discuss the Role of People with Disabilities in Globalization: You Deserve to Be Part of This World! Chapter 3: Vocational mathematics and competence: Effects of and resistance to globalisation Chapter 4: Mathematics education: a new balance between universalism and cultural diversity? Chapter 5: Sharing conceptual gifts by bringing into dialogue sociopolitical mathematics education, decolonial thought, and critical global citizenship education Chapter 6: Revisiting the ‘Modern’ in Mathematics: Exploring some consequences with respect to Mathematics Education Chapter 7: Becoming citizen subject in the body politic: antinomies of archaic, modern and posthuman citizenship spatiotemporalities and the political of mathematics education PART II: Troubling citizenship norms within national and local settings Chapter 8: Travelings of mathematically able bodies to Turkey: Configurations of paradoxical unities of (non)citizens across historical, national and global contexts Chapter 9: Mathematics Education Under The New National Education Policy Of India: A Janus-Faced Highbrow Mathematics Instead Of A Hydra-Headed Bahujan Mathematics Chapter 10: Globalization, racial projects, and the citizenship promise in mathematics education reform efforts Chapter 11: Health And Citizenship In High School Mathematics Textbooks: Conducting Brazilian Students’ Conducts Chapter 12: Learning to Become a Modernized Peasant-Citizen through Brazilian Mathematics Textbooks Chapter 13: The Elaboration of Culturally and Locally Based Mathematics Curricula in a Globalized Context Chapter 14: Working with primary teachers in England on mathematics teaching for citizenship: critical and philosophical approaches Chapter 15: ConclusionReviews“This volume takes up important ideas of globalization and citizenship that have been dismissed as irrelevant to mathematics education. The authors bring mathematics education into conversations about inclusion and exclusion that are both locally and globally relevant and that directly affect how people engage with mathematics as a tool of globalization.” Erika C. Bullock, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States “In the global context, the concept of citizenship has been shown to be highly unstable. Troubling ‘citizenship’ for mathematics education: The challenges of globalisation, diversity, and difference for the citizen subject in mathematical practices, is the first edited volume produced to explore this phenomenon from the perspective of mathematics educational thinkers. This is exciting and insightful work, with profound implications for theory, research and practice within the field.” Professor Emerita Margaret Walshaw, Massey University, New Zealand. “Critical mathematical citizenship is the desired goal of critical education for mathematics. But who or what is the citizen? This valuable book troubles global discourses of citizenship and their power, performativity and normativity in society. It reveals how, worldwide, mathematics participates in fabricating ‘citizens’ and ‘noncitizens’ in troubling ways, not always empowering or just.” Paul Ernest, Emeritus Professor of Mathematics Education, University of Exeter, United Kingdom. “This volume takes up important ideas of globalization and citizenship that have been dismissed as irrelevant to mathematics education. The authors bring mathematics education into conversations about inclusion and exclusion that are both locally and globally relevant and that directly affect how people engage with mathematics as a tool of globalization.” Erika C. Bullock, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States “In the global context, the concept of citizenship has been shown to be highly unstable. Troubling ‘citizenship’ for mathematics education: The challenges of globalisation, diversity, and difference for the citizen subject in mathematical practices, is the first edited volume produced to explore this phenomenon from the perspective of mathematics educational thinkers. This is exciting and insightful work, with profound implications for theory, research and practice within the field.” Professor Emerita Margaret Walshaw, Massey University, New Zealand. “Critical mathematical citizenship is the desired goal of critical education for mathematics. But who or what is the citizen? This valuable book troubles global discourses of citizenship and their power, performativity and normativity in society. It reveals how, worldwide, mathematics participates in fabricating ‘citizens’ and ‘noncitizens’ in troubling ways, not always empowering or just.” Paul Ernest, Emeritus Professor of Mathematics Education, University of Exeter, United Kingdom. Author InformationAnna Chronaki is Professor of Mathematics Education and Open Learning Technologies, University of Thessaly, Greece and Malmö University, Sweden. Ayşe Yolcu is Associate Professor of Mathematics Education, Hacettepe University, Turkey. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |