Vol 2, No.1
June 2009
Visits : 224
Editorial
Introduction
Bradley A.U. Levinson 
 
Theorizing Global Citizenship:
Discourses, Challenges, and Implications for Education
Nelly P. Stromquist
Human Rights Education in Costa Rica:
More Expectation than Implementation.
David Shiman
Development of Competencies through
Service Learning at the University
Pilar Folgueiras Bertomeu
Marcela Martínez Vivot
Democratization of Law:
A Look at the Popular Legal Promoters Program.
Fernanda Castro Fernandes
Flávia Schilling
Between citizen paralysis and praxis:
Toward a critical pedagogy for confronting global violence.
Adam Davidson-Harden
 
Interview with
Dr. Judith-Torney Purta
Jorge Baxter
Acerca da Relevância Social Urgente da Lingüística:
Ensino de Língua Portuguesa e Formaçao Cidadã no Brasil.
Milton Francisco
 

Editorial
Introduction

Bradley A.U. Levinson Indiana University, USA

As I write these words, the Fifth Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago has just wrapped up, and a renewed sense of respectful hemispheric cooperation is being widely proclaimed. The Inter - American Democratic Charter, which stimulates and reaffirms all OAS member states’ commitment to democracy as way of life, has once again been invoked as a touchstone for such cooperation. At the Inter-American Journal of Education for Democracy, we are heartened by these trends, and we also look forward to similar collaboration at the upcoming sixth OAS Meeting of Ministers of Education, already in planning for August 12th, in Quito, Ecuador. We see our work as contributing to educational development in the Americas, and we envision this work unfolding in a spirit of mutuality and public-mindedness. The Journal serves as a space for the exchange of research experiences and ideas, a vital forum for reflection amidst the otherwise urgent business of constructing and strengthening democratic political cultures in our region.

If you don't have Acrobat Reader, please download it Here

Español