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Securitisation, Counterterrorism and the Silencing of Dissent: The Educational Implications of Prevent
Place of publication | Year of publication | Collation: 
United Kingdom | 2016 |
Author: 
Aislinn O'Donnell
Corporate author: 
British Journal of Educational Studies
Region: 
Europe and North America

This paper outlines some of the implications of counterterrorist legislation, including Prevent, for the pedagogical relationship and for educational institutions. The concept of ‘radicalization’, central to the Prevent Strategy, is one that is contested in the field of counterterrorism, yet educators are now expected to identify and refer students ‘at risk of radicalization’. Based on the experience of teaching IRA and INLA prisoners in the Republic of Ireland, the author outlines a set of philosophical and ethical principles that ought to underpin education. It is argued that education must not be subordinated to security and intelligence agendas on pragmatic, educational and ethical grounds.

Resource Type: 
Research papers / journal articles
Theme: 
Civic / Citizenship / Democracy
Preventing violent extremism / genocide
Globalisation and social justice / International understanding
Level of education: 
Higher education
Lifelong learning
Keywords: 
educational quality
citizenship