A Desire for Active Citizens: An Exploratory Analysis of Citizenship Education for Young Migrants in New Zealand

This thesis examines whether the introduction of citizenship education in New Zealand would increase the levels of active citizenship of young migrant New Zealanders, using voter turnout as a measure. This research draws attention to an overlooked part of New Zealand political science research by st...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lee, Thomas Charles
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Social and Political Sciences 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/3012
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-30122015-03-30T15:27:50ZA Desire for Active Citizens: An Exploratory Analysis of Citizenship Education for Young Migrants in New ZealandLee, Thomas Charlespolitical participationvotingsocial capitalmigrantsNew Zealandcitizenship educationThis thesis examines whether the introduction of citizenship education in New Zealand would increase the levels of active citizenship of young migrant New Zealanders, using voter turnout as a measure. This research draws attention to an overlooked part of New Zealand political science research by studying young migrant New Zealanders. The theories and topics covered in this research include the notion of citizenship, education, political participation, social capital and multiculturalism. Both surveys and interviews are used to gauge young New Zealanders’ political attitudes and opinions, and their levels of political knowledge, interest, sophistication and socialisation are examined. The findings of this research suggest that citizenship education would not only be beneficial to young migrant New Zealanders but that citizenship education would benefit all young New Zealanders. It is argued that an increase in all young New Zealanders’ levels of political knowledge and interest are likely to have a positive effect on voter turnout levels. It is also argued that the current education curriculum does not explicitly encourage such learning. Using these findings in conjunction with theory, it is recommended that citizenship education is implemented into the New Zealand secondary school curriculum to ensure that New Zealand’s democracy is in good health for the current and future generations.University of Canterbury. Social and Political Sciences2009-10-22T01:19:00Z2009-10-22T01:19:00Z2009Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/3012enNZCUCopyright Thomas Charles Leehttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic political participation
voting
social capital
migrants
New Zealand
citizenship education
spellingShingle political participation
voting
social capital
migrants
New Zealand
citizenship education
Lee, Thomas Charles
A Desire for Active Citizens: An Exploratory Analysis of Citizenship Education for Young Migrants in New Zealand
description This thesis examines whether the introduction of citizenship education in New Zealand would increase the levels of active citizenship of young migrant New Zealanders, using voter turnout as a measure. This research draws attention to an overlooked part of New Zealand political science research by studying young migrant New Zealanders. The theories and topics covered in this research include the notion of citizenship, education, political participation, social capital and multiculturalism. Both surveys and interviews are used to gauge young New Zealanders’ political attitudes and opinions, and their levels of political knowledge, interest, sophistication and socialisation are examined. The findings of this research suggest that citizenship education would not only be beneficial to young migrant New Zealanders but that citizenship education would benefit all young New Zealanders. It is argued that an increase in all young New Zealanders’ levels of political knowledge and interest are likely to have a positive effect on voter turnout levels. It is also argued that the current education curriculum does not explicitly encourage such learning. Using these findings in conjunction with theory, it is recommended that citizenship education is implemented into the New Zealand secondary school curriculum to ensure that New Zealand’s democracy is in good health for the current and future generations.
author Lee, Thomas Charles
author_facet Lee, Thomas Charles
author_sort Lee, Thomas Charles
title A Desire for Active Citizens: An Exploratory Analysis of Citizenship Education for Young Migrants in New Zealand
title_short A Desire for Active Citizens: An Exploratory Analysis of Citizenship Education for Young Migrants in New Zealand
title_full A Desire for Active Citizens: An Exploratory Analysis of Citizenship Education for Young Migrants in New Zealand
title_fullStr A Desire for Active Citizens: An Exploratory Analysis of Citizenship Education for Young Migrants in New Zealand
title_full_unstemmed A Desire for Active Citizens: An Exploratory Analysis of Citizenship Education for Young Migrants in New Zealand
title_sort desire for active citizens: an exploratory analysis of citizenship education for young migrants in new zealand
publisher University of Canterbury. Social and Political Sciences
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/3012
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