Recognising University Students with Criminal Justice Experience: A Story-led Exploration
Uitgelicht
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175,00 |
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259,41 |
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259,41 |
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Beschrijving
Bol
This book explores how students with criminal justice experience navigate UK higher education, examining barriers, institutional framing, and support systems. Combining research and policy analysis, it challenges universities to rethink widening participation, equity, and justice-conscious practice. Exploring how students with criminal justice experience access higher education, experience university life, and navigate barriers while building support, this book offers rare insight into an often-overlooked dimension of widening participation, equity and justice in UK universities. Drawing on existing literature, empirical evidence and an analysis of regulatory tools, this book explores how students with criminal justice experience are often positioned within universities and how this framing can shape their engagement with higher education. It presents a complex and layered account that recognises the intersection of external social pressures, sector-wide priorities, institutional dynamics, and everyday interactions and invites readers to reflect critically on what they know, what they assume and how they might work to disrupt the status quo. This must-read text raises a series of fundamental questions about who the sector recognises as worthy recipients of initiatives to improve access and participation in higher education, as well as how it can modernise attempts to better serve its diverse, global community. It offers practical pathways for change, making it especially valuable to universities, regulators, and practitioners seeking to embed justice-conscious support within everyday higher education practices.
This book explores how students with criminal justice experience navigate UK higher education, examining barriers, institutional framing, and support systems. Combining research and policy analysis, it challenges universities to rethink widening participation, equity, and justice-conscious practice. Exploring how students with criminal justice experience access higher education, experience university life, and navigate barriers while building support, this book offers rare insight into an often-overlooked dimension of widening participation, equity and justice in UK universities. Drawing on existing literature, empirical evidence and an analysis of regulatory tools, this book explores how students with criminal justice experience are often positioned within universities and how this framing can shape their engagement with higher education. It presents a complex and layered account that recognises the intersection of external social pressures, sector-wide priorities, institutional dynamics, and everyday interactions and invites readers to reflect critically on what they know, what they assume and how they might work to disrupt the status quo. This must-read text raises a series of fundamental questions about who the sector recognises as worthy recipients of initiatives to improve access and participation in higher education, as well as how it can modernise attempts to better serve its diverse, global community. It offers practical pathways for change, making it especially valuable to universities, regulators, and practitioners seeking to embed justice-conscious support within everyday higher education practices.
AmazonPagina's: 166, Editie: Eerste editie, Hardcover, Routledge
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