Academic literature on the topic '(de)colonial éducations'
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Journal articles on the topic "(de)colonial éducations"
Lebecq, Pierre-Alban, and Jean Saint-Martin. "Paschal Grousset et les éducations physiques françaises et étrangères dans le contexte géopolitique européen et impérialiste (1880–1914)." STADION 44, no. 1 (2020): 138–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0172-4029-2020-1-138.
Full textSegalla, Spencer D. "The Micropolitics of Colonial Education in French West Africa, 1914–1919." French Colonial History 13 (May 1, 2012): 1–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/41938220.
Full textHanson, Aubrey Jean. "Teaching Indigenous Literatures for Decolonization: Challenging Learning, Learning to Challenge." Alberta Journal of Educational Research 66, no. 2 (June 15, 2020): 207–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.55016/ojs/ajer.v66i2.68509.
Full textLeddy, Shannon, and Susan O'Neill. "It’s Not Just a Matter of Time: Exploring Resistance to Indigenous Education." Alberta Journal of Educational Research 67, no. 4 (December 2, 2021): 336–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.55016/ojs/ajer.v67i4.69086.
Full textMiran-Guyon, Marie. "L’établissement de la mission méthodiste en Côte d’Ivoire (c. 1924-1940)." Social Sciences and Missions 36, no. 3-4 (December 14, 2023): 304–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18748945-bja10066.
Full textBouchard, Vincent. "Cinema van et Interpreter. Deux éléments fondamentaux du système de propagande britannique." Cinémas 20, no. 1 (February 17, 2010): 23–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/039283ar.
Full textISAMBERT-JAMATI, Viviane. "Travail, rapports sociaux, éducation en Europe." Sociologie et sociétés 12, no. 1 (September 30, 2002): 9–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/001361ar.
Full textDhume, Fabrice, Xavier Dunezat, Camille Gourdeau, and Aude Rabaud. "Peut-on parler de « racisme d’État » en France ?" Emulations - Revue de sciences sociales, no. 42 (June 5, 2022): 47–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.14428/emulations.42.04.
Full textBeaud, Guillaume. "« J’ai décidé d’être le père de la province ». Écriture de soi et répertoires de légitimation chez les élites administratives en Iran et au Pakistan." Politix 142, no. 2 (November 30, 2023): 27–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/pox.142.0027.
Full textLansari, Wassila Chahrazede Chahineze, and Faiza HADDAM BOUABDALLAH. "Teacher Training in the Post-Colonial Era (from 1962 - 2000 and up)." Revue plurilingue : Études des Langues, Littératures et Cultures 6, no. 1 (December 29, 2022): 91–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.46325/ellic.v6i1.89.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "(de)colonial éducations"
Ramirez, Romero Aïda. "Héritage colonial et construction de l'école nationale : Discours, normes et pratiques de socialisations à une nation plurielle. Le cas du Belize." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université Côte d'Azur, 2023. http://www.theses.fr/2023COAZ2023.
Full textIn this work, “nation” and “diversity” are thought and questioned together from the Education field. This dissertation brings elements that explain how identifications to a national category are constructed and naturalized. The reflections aim to decenter the idea that a nation is “one and homogenous” and to question the place that cultural differences occupy, in terms of inclusion and exclusion, in the discourses about the nation. Here, the concept of nation, as part of the Nation-state political model, is understood as a political and social construction. It is about Belize, historically colonized by Great Britain and independent from 1981, that like many other “new” nations after decolonization, were legitimized by an international power and was defined, demarcated, and “manufactured” from a State. The Education is a tool largely invested by States to diffuse representations and symbols that contribute to constructions of national identifications. The schools are also spaces where children socialize daily and construct identifications according to social categories. This research studies the ways in which actors of the educative system (institutions and schools) mobilize and transform, in historical accounts (texts, speeches, images, etc.) racial and ethnic categories which participate, in the schools, to the process of national incorporation and identification. In order to understand the complexity of the process of “nationalization” of students, this study combines three analytical approaches: the social history of the institutionalization of the colonial education; a sociology of actors in educational institutions responsible to write the national history; an ethnography of educational practices in primary schools. In this way, this work considers the historical, institutional, ideological, and social dimensions that contribute to build national socializations in schools. From local and global perspectives, the analyses show that the development of the colonial education participated to shape racial and ethnic identities specific to Belize that are rearticulated today in the national school. The dissertation enlightens the links between governmental institutions (ministry of Education, University) with an ethnic organization and primary schools, in the elaboration and implementation of educational programs or projects. It reports on reproductions, transformations and ethnopolitical appropriations of the colonial history that make evolved, not only the historical stories of the nation, but also shows the diversity of significations that actors construct about differences. Finally, the voices of the children nuance and question the schematical and stereotypical discourses of the institutions. The weight of history is significant, however, the student expressions collected in this study, show how far the national imaginaries are smooth and plural, the pupils appropriate and reinterpret the discourses, proving that there is no “one nation”, but a multiplicity of perceptions and backgrounds that give meanings to identifications qualified as nationals
Maurice, Edenz. "Faire l’École dans une "vieille colonie" : un État colonial aux prises avec le monde scolaire de la Guyane française (de 1928 au début des années 1950)." Thesis, Paris, Institut d'études politiques, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018IEPP0011.
Full textThis doctoral dissertation aims at studying the running of the colonial state in French Guiana through the prism of its action in the field of education between 1928 and 1951. During this period and for the only time in its history, the territory was split into two administrative entities headed, however, by the same governor. At the heart of this research lies the hypothesis of a singularity, in a twofold perspective, both social and political, of the French Guiana colonial experience in the 1930s and 1940s. This hypothesis led to the shaping of the notions of "colony-department" and of "segmented assimilation". This research thus articulates social history of professional groups from educational and activist circles, anthropology of indigenous societies of the Amazonian interior and sociology of the state and of public policies. In so doing, this study intends to contribute, on the one hand, to a better understanding of the colonial state from the too often neglected point of view of an "old colony"; on the other, to a history of the Republic which gives the overseas territories the place they deserve
Louis, Abel Alexis. "Les Libres de couleur en Martinique des origines à 1815 : l'entre-deux d'un groupe social dans la tourmente coloniale." Thesis, Antilles-Guyane, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011AGUY0395/document.
Full textTo evoke the place of free coloureds in Martinic from the earliest times to 1815, it is evoked a curious paradox. In order to apprehend this last and to tackle free coloureds position in the society, it had to look into the process of development of this group from 1635 to the day before french revolution. The access of this process could not become without taking into consideration of the political controlled by the administration on emancipation. The utilization of parish registers (then registers of births, marriages and deaths) and deeds executed by a notary permitted confrontation between the theory (the colonial right) and the daily practical. It had to show how in spite of french revolution and these ideals, and this impact in Martinic, the segregation be continued against free coloureds group and confirmed space in between of this group in the society in spite of these numerical and economic growth (by way of emancipation principally), and those, as far as the beginning of the Restoration. The colonial political controlled by different administrations who followed one another and unrest who perturbed etablished order assisted the comprehension of this phenomenon. If free coloureds were assimilated since 1685 to natural subjects of french kingdom with the same rights, privileges and immunities, they did not exercise as whites some public responsabilities and offices, some liberal trades, some positions in militia (officers). Before the end of observation period (1815), some people were succeded to hoist themselves economically on a level with whites wholesalers. In spite of that, they were limited in a intermediate place between whites and slaves, a "buffer zone". Free coloureds who were as well as blacks than halfcastes have been rejected by whites that they would wish to equal and despised in general slaves even when they had common interests (a mother or a sister in slavery). As whites, they possessed slaves, estates and houses. However, their situation was so paradoxical in the colonial society
Bessaoud-Alonso, Patricia. "Les enjeux éducatifs des mémoires algériennes coloniales et post-coloniales : fabrication et construction des subjectivités." Paris 8, 2008. http://octaviana.fr/document/140534695#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=0.
Full textIn this PHD thesis, I tried to show that the process of building up colonial and post-colonial Algerian memories are, both, social and subjective constructions that develop thanks to the social group, the family and the individual. For this purpose, I have chosen to study the construction process of a colonial memory through the populations of the colonial Algeria and to explain how they were assigned a special place. Individuals have then entered categories that have marked out their lives and those of their descendants, causing effects on their social and psychic construction through denial, active falsification and silence. In this perspective, I wanted to find out what the most important and pregnant devices had been : that is to say the implementation of racial segregation by a system of laws and rules : Crémieux decree, native code and 1889 direct naturalization law, and then establishing of separated instruction with the creation of specific schools for natives. Then I tried to define the notion of memory, which is a polysemic notion, in a theoretical analysis relying on comprehensive and clinical sociology as well as on historic sociology, opting for a crossing methodology. Thus, thanks to public, private and family files and thanks to informal interviews and many ethnographic observations, I tried to understand how, through a family history (which is the topic of my investigation), from the end of the 19th century to nowadays, collective and family memories were made up and falsified. My goal was then to prove that men's memory was not men's history, but that among these questions, the question of identity arises and consequently all the current injunctions about remembrance and repentance. Memory resists, it resists polysemy and a non common definition. Probably because memory makes sense for the individual in their writing of the past and in their own appropriation of time and space
Motte, Martin. "Une éducation géostratégique : la pensée navale française de la Jeune École à 1914." Paris 4, 2001. http://www.theses.fr/2001PA040025.
Full textVari, Judith. "Expériences éducatives dans les espaces périscolaires : contribution à une sociologie de l'Education nouvelle." Paris, EHESS, 2008. http://www.theses.fr/2008EHES0061.
Full textThis study based on ground inquiry through interviews and observations conducted mainly at Gennevilliers shows how extracurricular spaces such as Summer or leisure camps as well as schooling-aid programs practising active methods from new pedagogical trends are an experimental field towards democracy following John Dewey's concepts, understood like a continuous and daily experience of cooperation. These active methods allow young camp instructors to build themselves into responsible adults and at the same time offer children and teenagers the chance to be considered fully as social and moral actors. So, pedagogical practices developed after Education Nouvelle movements have contributed to modify the view on childhood by favouring a pedagogy based on affect and trust. They have found in extracurricular spaces a proper ground for their development. Nevertheless, these practices sometimes meet some problems to be installed when instructors find themselves unable to establish their relationship on trust with life-wounded teenagers
Ilenda, Tryphon. "De l'école coloniale à l'école postcoloniale en République Démocratique du Congo : permanences, évolution, rupture des enjeux sociaux des savoirs scolaires." Paris 5, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011PA05H014.
Full textHélie, Anissa. "Maîtresses et mission coloniale en Méditerranée. Trajectoires d'institutrices européennes en Algérie coloniale, 1874-1949 : émanciper les écolières ou féminiser les «fatmas»." Paris, EHESS, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006EHES0024.
Full textThis research focuses on women teachers (in secular primary schools) in a specific historical and political context : that of colonial Algeria. Numerous official sources and historical research have priviliged the problematic linked to the role and impact of colonial schooling, yet few took interest in the teaching staff. This work therefore has two objectives. On the one hand, present the specific experiences of secular women teachers, by tracing some aspects of their lives - private as well as professional, and by, notably, drawing from their own testimonies. It is also about analyzing the roles they might have played in colonial and acculturation processes, as european women and as teachers. The dates we selected (1874-1949) are significant at various level : at the level of the development of colonization, at the level of the history of secular education and at the level of women's history
Fortin, Lana. "L'enseignement scolaire et la bourgeoisie nationale en pays colonisé : le cas des "évolués" au Congo belge." Master's thesis, Université Laval, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/29441.
Full textMessineo, Dominique. "La Jeunesse irrégulière (1830-1912)." Thesis, Paris 10, 2010. http://www.theses.fr/2010PA100067.
Full textThis thesis will look at juvenile delinquency and the protection of children in moral danger in late nineteenth century France. Following the studies relating to the history of penal administration, it will examine the workings of repressive action led against juvenile deviants or offenders at that time. The aim of this approach is to throw light on the juridical rationality of juvenile correction. Between the rise of the first juridical apparatus of correction in the 1830’s and the creation of specialized juvenile courts by the 1912 law, legislators, administrators, and philanthropists sort to reform the Penal Code of 1810. The Penal Code was founded on the basis of moral responsibility while the preoccupations of the governments of that period were to eliminate the causes of public disorder. Consequently, the Governments did not target the repression of juvenile offence for the danger of juvenile corruption was greater. The very term juvenile offender changed to include children who were victims of parental moral deviance, tramps and child beggars. The public action led against this ‘irregular youth’ began to make provision for risk prevention and promote family management, re-education by social workers, substitution of parental authority by correctional institutions and public assistance. This thesis shows how the criminal law was reviewed and changed in order to make better provision for children at risk and act in their interest and respect. Ultimately, a new form of law emerged at the crossroads of science, social expertise and justice
Books on the topic "(de)colonial éducations"
Bataille, Jean-Marie. Architectures et éducation: Les colonies de vacances. Vigneux: Matrice, 2010.
Find full textLa dernière marche de l'empire: Une éducation saharienne. Paris: Découverte, 2009.
Find full textOuedraogo, Albert. Éducation et independance pour l'Afrique du XXIe siècle. Ouagadougou: PUO, 2013.
Find full textYamamoto, Kazuyuki. Jiyū, byōdō, shokuminchisei: Taiwan ni okeru shokuminchi kyōiku seido no keisei. Taihoku-shi: Kokuritsu Taiwan Daigaku Shuppan Chūshin, 2015.
Find full text1803-1868, Fulford Francis, ed. A pastoral letter addressed to the clergy of his diocese. [Montreal?: s.n., 1985.
Find full textMay, S. Passmore b. 1828. and Colonial and Indian Exhibition (1886 : London, England), eds. Report on the school appliances, pupils' work, etc.: Exhibited by the Education Department of Ontario, Canada, at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition, London, England, 1886 published under the direction of the Honorable the Minister of Education. [Toronto?: s.n.], 1993.
Find full textClifton, Johnson. Old-time schools and school-books. Detroit: Omnigraphics, 1999.
Find full textBrouillette, Daniel. L'affaire est pet shop. Montraeal: Editions Les Malins, 2013.
Find full textEntangled objects: Exchange, material culture, and colonialism in the Pacific. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1991.
Find full textKallaway, Peter. Changing Face of Colonial Education in Africa. Taylor & Francis Group, 2021.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "(de)colonial éducations"
Bocquet, Jérôme. "17 : Le rôle des missions catholiques dans la fondation d'un nouveau réseau d'institutions éducatives au Moyen-Orient arabe." In Le choc colonial et l'islam, 327–42. La Découverte, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/dec.luiza.2006.01.0327.
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