This chapter aims to extend the repertoire of understandings about place and policy in place-based education with a focus on ideas of space, mobility, and belonging. The view provided by this extended perspective leads to the question: How does mobility challenge and provide new ways of thinking about place-based education?
BallE. L., & LaiA. (2006). Place-based pedagogy for arts and humanities. Pedagogy: Critical approaches to teaching literature, language, composition, and culture, 6(2), 261–287.
3.
BluntA. (2007). Cultural geographies of migration: Mobility, transnationality and diaspora. Progress in Human Geography, 31(5), 684–694.
4.
CresswellT. (2006). On the move: Mobility in the modern western world. New York, NY: Routledge.
5.
DeleuzeG., & GuattariF. (1987). A thousand plateaus: Capitalism and schizophrenia. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
6.
DelhiK. (1996). Travelling tales: Education reform and parental “choice” in postmodern times. Journal of Education Policy, 11(1), 75–88.
7.
EadeJ. (1997). Reconstructing places: Changing images of locality in Docklands and Spitalfields. In EadeJ. (Ed.), Living the global city.London, England: Routledge.
8.
ForseyM., DaviesS., & WalfordG. (Eds.). (2008). The globalisation of school choice. Oxford, England: Symposium.
9.
FoucaultM. (1983). On the genealogy of ethics: An overview of a work in progress. In DreyfusH. & RabinowP. (Eds.), Michel Foucault: Beyond structuralism and hermeneutics (2nd ed., pp. 229–252). Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press.
10.
FrancisB., & MillsM. (2012). Schools as damaging organisations: Instigating a dialogue concerning alternative models of schooling. Pedagogy, Culture & Society, 20(2), 251–271.
11.
FreidmanJ. (1999). The hybridization of roots and the absence of the bush. In FeatherstoneM. & LashS. (Eds.), Spaces of culture: City-nation-world.London, England: Sage.
12.
GannonS. (2009). Rewriting “the road to nowhere”: Place pedagogies in western Sydney. Urban Education, 44(5), 608–624.
13.
GregoryD. (2004). The colonial present. Oxford, England: Blackwell.
14.
GruenewaldD. A. (2003a). The best of both worlds: A critical pedagogy of place. Educational Researcher, 32(4), 3–12.
15.
GruenewaldD. A. (2003b). Foundations of place: A multidisciplinary framework for place-conscious education. American Educational Research Journal, 40(3), 619–654.
16.
GruenewaldD. A., & SmithG. A. (Eds.). (2008). Place-based education in the global age: Local diversity. New York, NY: Routledge.
17.
GulsonK. N. (2011). Education policy, space and the city: Markets and the (in)visibility of race. New York, NY: Routledge.
18.
HackworthJ. (2007). The neoliberal city: Governance, ideology, and development in American urbanism. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
19.
HallS. (1983). The problem of ideology: Marxism without guarantees. In MatthewsB. (Ed.), Marx: 100 years on. London, England: Lawrence and Wishart.
20.
HarveyD. (2008). The right to the city. New Left Review, 53(September/October), 23–40.
21.
LefebvreH. (1996). Space and politics. In KofmanE. & LebasE. (Eds.), Writings on cities (pp. 185–202). Cambridge, MA: Blackwell (Original work published 1968).
22.
LepofskyJ., & FraserJ. C. (2003). Building community citizens: Claiming the right to place-making in the city. Urban Studies, 40(1), 127–142.
23.
LevinM. (1979). Review of “Understanding the alternative schools movement: The retransformation of the school” by Daniel L. Luke. Curriculum Inquiry, 9(4), 337–349.
24.
LipmanP. (2011). The new political economy of urban education: Neoliberalism, race and the right to the city. New York, NY: Routledge.
25.
MarkerM. (2006). After the Makuh whale hunt: Indigenous knowledge and limits to multicultural discourse. Urban Education, 41(5), 482–505.
26.
MasseyD. (1994). Double articulation: A place in the world. In BammerA. (Ed.), Displacements: Cultural identities in question (pp. 110–122). Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
27.
MasseyD. (2005). For space. London, England: Sage Publications.
28.
McCannE., & WardK. (2011). Introduction. Urban assemblages: Territories, relations, practices, and power. In McCannE. & WardK. (Eds.), Mobile urbanism: Cities and policymaking in the global age (pp. xiii–xxxv). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
29.
McInerneyP., SmythJ., & DownB. (2011). “Coming to a place near you?” The politics and possibilities of a critical pedagogy of place-based education. Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 39(1), 3–16.
30.
McKenzieM. (2008). The places of pedagogy: Or, what we can do with culture through intersubjective experiences. Environmental Education Research, 14(3), 361–373.
31.
Moreton-RobinsonA. (2003). I still call Australia home: Indigenous belonging and place in a white postcolonizing society. In AhmedS., CastañedaC., FortierA., & ShellerM. (Eds.), Uprootings/regroupings: Questions of home and migration (pp. 23–40). Oxford, England: Berg.
32.
MorganA. (2012). Inclusive place-based education for “just sustainability.” International Journal of Inclusive Education. doi:10.1080/13603116.13602012.13655499.
PapastergiadisN. (2012). Cosmopolitanism and culture. Cambridge, England: Polity Press.
35.
PurcellM. (2003). Citizenship and the right to the global city: Reimagining the captialist world order. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 27(3), 564–590.
36.
PurcellM. (2006). Urban democracy and the local trap. Urban Studies, 43(11), 1921–1941.
37.
RaffoC., & DysonA. (2007). Full service extended schools and educational inequality in urban contexts—New opportunities for progress?Journal of Education Policy, 22, 263–282.
38.
RuitenbergC. (2005). Deconstructing the experience of the local: Toward a radical pedagogy of place. In HoweK. (Ed.), Philosophy of Education 2005 (pp. 212–220). Urbana, IL: Philosophy of Education Society.
39.
SmithM. P., & GuarnizoL. E. (2009). Global mobility, shifting borders and urban citizenship. Tijdschrift voor economische en sociale geografie, 100(5), 610–622.
40.
SomervilleM. J. (2010). A place pedagogy for “global contemporaneity.” Educational Philosophy and Theory, 42(3), 326–344.
41.
SomervilleM. J., & PerkinsT. (2003). Border work in the contact zone: Thinking indigenous/non-indigenous collaboration spatially. Journal of Intercultural Studies, 24(3), 253–266.
42.
SymesC. (2007). Coaching and training: An ethnography of student commuting on Sydney's suburban trains. Mobilities, 2(3), 443–461.
43.
TaylorC. (2009). Choice, competition, and segregation in a United Kingdom education market. American Journal of Education, 115, 549–568.
44.
ThiemC. H. (2007). The spatial politics of educational privatization: Re-reading the US homeschooling movement. In GulsonK. N. & SymesC. (Eds.), Spatial theories of education: Policy and geography matters (pp. 17–36). New York, NY: Routledge.
45.
VertovecS. (2010). Towards post-multiculturalism? Changing communities, conditions and contexts of diversity. International Social Science Journal, 61(199), 83–95.