
Julia Hugo,
Charlotte Assmann,
Andreas Schmidt
(Hrsg.)
with the assistance of
David Sehmisch
Educational Leadership and Children´s Rights?
Kinderrechte als Führungsaufgabe?
2025, Gemeinsam Schule gestalten / Collaborative School Development, Band 6, 154 Seiten, paperback, 39,90 €, ISBN 978-3-8309-4825-4
How is leadership in educational contexts related to children’s rights?
With the ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UN CRC) by most states, children’s rights become increasingly important in politics, society, and thus in the respective education system. The role of educational leadership at different levels in the promotion of children’s rights is an unresolved issue.
This volume intends to integrate both domains. Therefore, the compiled articles either focus on educational leadership and discuss its impacts on children’s rights or on children’s rights and their implications for educational leadership. In doing so, they take diverse theoretical, conceptual, and empirical perspectives, combining (inter)national views from educational sciences, policy, and practice.
Scientific contributions highlight current strands of discourse and research (e.g. transformational leadership; UNICEF Child Rights Schools Program); guest articles address different examples for educational practice (e.g. early childhood education or care programs).
The volume addresses scholars in the educational sciences and related disciplines as well as those involved in educational policy, practice, administration, and law.
With the ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UN CRC) by most states, children’s rights become increasingly important in politics, society, and thus in the respective education system. The role of educational leadership at different levels in the promotion of children’s rights is an unresolved issue.
This volume intends to integrate both domains. Therefore, the compiled articles either focus on educational leadership and discuss its impacts on children’s rights or on children’s rights and their implications for educational leadership. In doing so, they take diverse theoretical, conceptual, and empirical perspectives, combining (inter)national views from educational sciences, policy, and practice.
Scientific contributions highlight current strands of discourse and research (e.g. transformational leadership; UNICEF Child Rights Schools Program); guest articles address different examples for educational practice (e.g. early childhood education or care programs).
The volume addresses scholars in the educational sciences and related disciplines as well as those involved in educational policy, practice, administration, and law.