Lived and taught interculturality: Reflections on conviviality relations and integration in educational environments in Spain (Granada) and Portugal (Lisbon)
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Intellect
Materia
Education Conviviality Interculturalism Integration migrant Immigrant youth students
Date
2019Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Padilla, B. & Olmos Alcaraz, A. (2019). ‘Lived and taught interculturality’: Reflections on conviviality relations and integration in educational environments in Spain (Granada) and Portugal (Lisbon). Portuguese Journal of Social Science, 18(1), 109-128. [https://doi.org/10.1386/pjss.18.1.109_1]
Sponsorship
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia de Portugal PTDC / CS-SOC / 101693/2008; Junta de Andalucía, Projects of Excellence, 2007–10; Ministry of Science and Innovation, National Plan of I+D+i, 2014–16Abstract
Granada and Lisbon, cities defined as ‘super-diverse’, host dynamics of exchange and
interactions among sociocultural groups that go beyond mere coexistence. Educational
environments (both formal and informal) host these aforementioned relationships
especially among teenagers. Adolescents represent a significant social group as the
‘subjects/objects’ of public interventions through intercultural programmes and are
protagonists of daily intercultural dialogues. In this article, we approach these ideas
through the concept of conviviality. We comparatively analyse the indicators from the Migrant Integration Policy Index (MIPEX), a policy instrument-tool, applied in
the education field and the data obtained through ethnographic research carried out
in educational environments in Granada and Lisbon in specific programmes targeting adolescents and youth. Through this analysis we unveil the gaps of migration
integration indexes such as MIPEX in the field of integration in education, compared
with an ethnographic assessment of intercultural relations on how youngsters live
and learn interculturality.