“We are not equal citizens in any respect”: citizenship education and the routinization of violence in the everyday lives of religious minority youth in Pakistan

Q1 Social Sciences
Zaheer Ali, Utsa Mukherjee
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article foregrounds religious minority youths’ subjective experiences of citizenship education in Pakistan to reflect on the relationship between educational curricula and religious exclusion. Drawing on narrative interviews with Hindu, Sikh, and Christian youth in the Punjab province, we demonstrate how sectarian constructions of national history and the paucity of positive representation in the curriculum inflict routinized forms of violence on minority youth and create an environment where anti-minority discriminations and prejudices can be justified. Youths’ narratives also reveal how they mobilize available institutional mechanisms to challenge these routine forms of violence and reinforce their commitment to an inclusive Pakistani identity. Reforms in citizenship education curricula are therefore urgently needed to address these concerns and promote an inclusive Pakistani identity. We situate our findings both in the historical context of contemporary Pakistan and the wider region of South Asia which has witnessed a rapid growth in exclusionary religious nationalisms.
“我们在任何方面都不是平等的公民”:巴基斯坦宗教少数群体青年日常生活中的公民教育和暴力常规化
本文以巴基斯坦宗教少数群体青年的公民教育主观体验为背景,反思教育课程与宗教排斥的关系。通过对旁遮普省的印度教、锡克教和基督教青年的叙述性采访,我们展示了民族历史的宗派建构和课程中积极代表的缺乏如何对少数民族青年施加常规形式的暴力,并创造了一个反少数民族歧视和偏见可以合理化的环境。青年的叙述还揭示了他们如何动员现有的体制机制来挑战这些常规形式的暴力,并加强他们对包容巴基斯坦身份的承诺。因此,迫切需要对公民教育课程进行改革,以解决这些问题并促进包容的巴基斯坦身份。我们将我们的研究结果置于当代巴基斯坦和南亚更广泛地区的历史背景下,南亚地区的排他性宗教民族主义迅速增长。
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来源期刊
Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education
Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
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