Work for Social Justice from Education

<p>Since Plato in his Republic raised Justice as one of the fundamental virtues, the basis of others, has been considered as one of the goals to be achieved by society. However, it was in the first industrial revolution when this concept, already with its adjective Social, takes on all its str...

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Main Authors: F. Javier Murillo, Reyes Hernandez-Castilla
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad Autónoma de Madrid 2016-05-01
Series:Revista Iberoamericana sobre Calidad, Eficacia y Cambio en Educación
Online Access:https://revistas.uam.es/index.php/reice/article/view/4332
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spelling doaj-b3183bd2f77b49ed9f78e617ab81fd1f2020-11-25T02:36:58ZspaUniversidad Autónoma de Madrid Revista Iberoamericana sobre Calidad, Eficacia y Cambio en Educación1696-47132016-05-01943997Work for Social Justice from EducationF. Javier MurilloReyes Hernandez-Castilla<p>Since Plato in his Republic raised Justice as one of the fundamental virtues, the basis of others, has been considered as one of the goals to be achieved by society. However, it was in the first industrial revolution when this concept, already with its adjective Social, takes on all its strength and meaning. In these last decades, the concern increases, in such a way that Julián Marías went on to say that "the 20th century would not be understandable without that term" (Marías, 1974: 7). With globalization, migratory movements and the crisis, inequalities become more complex: gender, social class, culture, mother tongue, ability, sexual orientation ... they become causes of exclusion. The gap between North and South, rich and poor, native-immigrants, more able-less capable ... is growing, but also the sensitivity to build a more just society. With this background, the citizen movement, already international, of the Indignados is more than justified. However, in addition to being outraged, we must act.</p><p>And in that context, education plays a fundamental role. Far are the pessimistic views that the school is a mere instrument of social reproduction, as defended both the Coleman (1966) and Plowden (1969) and the French sociologists (Bourdieu and Paseron, 1972). The school, on the one hand, is the instrument that society uses to legitimize injustices through its competence to grant and deny degrees (Connell, 1997) and, on the other hand, its ability to compensate for the differences of departure has been demonstrated. and contribute to social mobility.</p>https://revistas.uam.es/index.php/reice/article/view/4332
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F. Javier Murillo
Reyes Hernandez-Castilla
spellingShingle F. Javier Murillo
Reyes Hernandez-Castilla
Work for Social Justice from Education
Revista Iberoamericana sobre Calidad, Eficacia y Cambio en Educación
author_facet F. Javier Murillo
Reyes Hernandez-Castilla
author_sort F. Javier Murillo
title Work for Social Justice from Education
title_short Work for Social Justice from Education
title_full Work for Social Justice from Education
title_fullStr Work for Social Justice from Education
title_full_unstemmed Work for Social Justice from Education
title_sort work for social justice from education
publisher Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
series Revista Iberoamericana sobre Calidad, Eficacia y Cambio en Educación
issn 1696-4713
publishDate 2016-05-01
description <p>Since Plato in his Republic raised Justice as one of the fundamental virtues, the basis of others, has been considered as one of the goals to be achieved by society. However, it was in the first industrial revolution when this concept, already with its adjective Social, takes on all its strength and meaning. In these last decades, the concern increases, in such a way that Julián Marías went on to say that "the 20th century would not be understandable without that term" (Marías, 1974: 7). With globalization, migratory movements and the crisis, inequalities become more complex: gender, social class, culture, mother tongue, ability, sexual orientation ... they become causes of exclusion. The gap between North and South, rich and poor, native-immigrants, more able-less capable ... is growing, but also the sensitivity to build a more just society. With this background, the citizen movement, already international, of the Indignados is more than justified. However, in addition to being outraged, we must act.</p><p>And in that context, education plays a fundamental role. Far are the pessimistic views that the school is a mere instrument of social reproduction, as defended both the Coleman (1966) and Plowden (1969) and the French sociologists (Bourdieu and Paseron, 1972). The school, on the one hand, is the instrument that society uses to legitimize injustices through its competence to grant and deny degrees (Connell, 1997) and, on the other hand, its ability to compensate for the differences of departure has been demonstrated. and contribute to social mobility.</p>
url https://revistas.uam.es/index.php/reice/article/view/4332
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