VOLUME 1 (2009), ISSUE 1: Teaching and Learning in a Globalising World
Introduction. Teaching and Learning in a Globalizing World, Hanna Schissler
Can National History Be De-Provincialized? U.S. History Textbook Controversies in the 1940s and 1990s, Thomas Bender
Visualizing the Former Cold War "Other": Images of Eastern Europe in World Regional Geography Textbooks in the United States, Dmitrii Sidorov
The Perpetuation of War in U. S. History Textbooks, Seth Scott
In a World of Migration: Rethinking Literacy, Language, and Learning Texts, Elizabeth P. Quintero
The Riddle of a Common History: The United States in Mexican Textbook Controversies, Mauricio Tenorio-Trillo
Historical Memory, International Conflict, and Japanese Textbook Controversies in Three Epochs, Yoshiko Nozaki and Mark Selden
Contending "Historical" Identities in India, Deepa Nair
History and Interethnic Conflicts in Putin's Russia, Dmitry Shlapentokh
Weapons of Mass Instruction: Schoolbooks and Democratization in Multiethnic Central Europe, Charles Ingrao
Migration in German Textbooks: Is Multiperspectivity an Adequate Response? Barbara Christophe
Navigating a Globalizing World: Thoughts on Textbook Analysis, Teaching, and Learning, Hanna Schissler