TY - JOUR AB - The article argues that citizenship education and human rights education can be understood as educational responses to specific social and political challenges in different national, regional and global contexts. It outlines four cases: (1) Nbsp; the early German response of civic education; (2) The late British response of citizenship education; (3) The response of EDC within the European framework of the Council of Europe; (4) The response of HRE within the global framework of the UN and the UNESCO. The main aim is to contribute to the necessary clarification of what is shared and what is different of EDC and HRE in this ongoing process of cooperation and integration between the two approaches in Europe. DA - 2008-02-03 DO - 10.4119/jsse-384 LA - eng PY - 2008-02-03 SN - 1618-5293 T2 - JSSE - Journal of Social Science Education TI - What Do Human Rights Mean for Citizenship Education? UR - https://doi.org/10.4119/jsse-384 Y2 - 2024-12-26T06:55:30 ER -