1. Introducing complexity of educational diversification
Kari Kantasalmi and Gunilla Holm
2. Education and nationalism in Scotland: Nationalism as a governing source
Jenny Ozga
3. Language, national identity and school: The role of the Catalan-language immersion program in contemporary Catalan nationalism
Montserrat Clua i Fainé
4. Geographical divergences of educational credentials in the modern nation-state: A case-study of Belgium 1961-2011
Raf Vanderstraeten and Frederik Van der Gucht
5. Nationalism as a positive value?
Tetyana Koskmanova and Tetyana Ravchyna
6. Saami educational and knowledge claims in school systems of the Nordic countries
Irja Seurujärvi-Kari and Kari Kantasalami
7. Differentiation and diversification in compulsory education: A conceptual analysis
Lauri Ojalehto, Mira Kalalahti, Sonja Kosunen and Janne Varjo
<8. Cultural capital, equality and diversifying education
Anna-Kaisha Berisha, Risto Rinne, Tero Järvinen and Heikki Kinnari
9. Discourses on gender and achievement in lower secondary education
Elisabet Öhrn, Lisa Asp-Onsjö and Ann-Sofie Holm
10. Justice in education in the Nordic countries: A discussion of perspectives and possibilities
Dennis Beach
11. Not all students are equally equal: Normality as Finnishness
Ina Juva and Gunilla Holm
Kari Kantasalmi is Head of Research Affairs, Faculty of Behavioural Sciences, University of Helsinki. With a cross disciplinary research profile, focusing on boundary issues in organization of education and schooling, he is currently a vice-president for Europe in Research Committee on sociology of education in the International Sociological Association (ISA).
Gunilla Holm is Professor of Education in the Institute of Behavioural Sciences at the University of Helsinki and director of the Nordic Centre of Excellence in Education ‘Justice through Education’. Her research interests are focused on photography as a data collection method as well as on issues in education related to educational justice, race, ethnicity, class, and gender.
This book offers insights into the nation-state and education relationship by problematizing and analyzing the assumed straightforwardness of the role of education and schooling by placing the issue in very contemporary contested nation-state structures like Scotland, Catalonia, Ukraine and Belgium. These conflict situations and contested power relations are in a way some of Europe’s internal North-South struggles. In addition, the particular Nordic North-South example of the Saami with their status as indigenous people recognized in international law is viewed in terms of their educational struggle for better consideration of their cultural features in Saami land crossing the Nordic states. The book focuses on the Nordic countries, often viewed as globally exemplary in their educational arrangements, but casts deeper insight into Nordic education and points to problematic schooling issues in Northern Europe. This volume presents somewhat unexpected views on European educational arrangements with regard to the European growing diversity.