British Association for International and Comparative Education

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What is BAICE

BAICE is a diverse professional association which promotes teaching, research, policy and development in all aspects of international and comparative education. We are committed to research, study, and policy advice. BAICE is the British affiliate of the World Council of Comparative Education Societies but membership is open to all interested in international and comparative education, regardless of nationality or institutional affiliation.

Individual Membership

We are a diverse professional association comprised of academics, researchers, policy makers, research students and members of governmental and non-governmental organisations. Membership is open to all who subscribe to our aims. Benefits of membership include a subscription to Compare, discounted rates at conferences and events, and networking opportunities.

Association Journal

BAICE produces the journal, Compare, which publishes research related to educational development and change in different parts of the world. It seeks analyses of educational discourse, policy and practice across disciplines, and their implications for teaching, learning and management.

2011-2012 BAICE President Announced

We are delighted to announce that the BAICE President for 2011-12 is Professor Jo Boyden of the University of Oxford.

Jo Boyden (Professor of Development Studies) has been an authority on child development and children's rights since the mid-1980s. Over that time, she has worked on various aspects of research and policy with children, particularly child labour, education, children in conflict (especially working with the Refugee Studies Centre), as well as publishing on childhood resilience in the context of adversity, poverty, and socio-cultural development.

Jo has worked in a wide range of countries, including: Bangladesh, Burma, Cambodia, Ethiopia, India, Peru (where she carried out her doctoral research), Somaliland and Sri Lanka. She has advised many of the large INGOs (Christian Children's Fund, Plan, Save the Children, Oxfam) as well as UN and other multilateral agencies and bilateral donors (CIDA, Danida, DFID, SIDA). One of her best-known works ('What Works for Working Children') was written for Save the Children Sweden.

Jo is a social anthropologist and trained at University College, London (BSc Hons, 1973), Cambridge University and the London School of Economics (PhD, 1983). She currently teaches on the MSc in Forced Migration programme and supervises seven DPhil students.

Her recent research has maintained a broad multidisciplinary range alongside a focus on issues of childhood poverty and she is widely recognised as an authority on children by both policymakers and practitioners and across key academic disciplines like education, psychology, sociology, anthropology and development studies. As Director of Young Lives since 2005, Jo leads a 5-country, multidisciplinary team, providing strategic vision, guidance on research and analysis, and using her extensive networks to increase the project's outreach and influence.

 

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Last modified: 15 May, 2012

Webmaster: Terra Sprague

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Information presented on this website is intended for those interested in learning more about BAICE. We believe information to be accurate at the time of initial publication or last modification, and we cannot accept responsibility for errors or omissions. Unless explicitly stated otherwise, all material is copyright © BAICE (The British Association for International and Comparative Education).