Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education

Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education

Published by Taylor & Francis on behalf of the British Association for International and Comparative Education

Online ISSN: 1469-3623

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Print ISSN: 0305-7925

Journal websiteAuthor guidelines

Top-read articles

37 reads in the past 30 days

Teachers in ‘international schools’ as an emerging field of inquiry: A literature review of themes and theoretical developments

June 2023

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758 Reads

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19 Citations

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Tristan Bunnell

Elink to paper: https://www.tandfonline.com/share/AWAJPAFRPJCCSHZMEFP3?target=10.1080/03057925.2023.2212110 This review article identifies the trends and developments regarding teachers in international schools from 1998 until 2022. International school teachers as a group are worthy of study as the number of schools delivering a curriculum in English outside of an English-speaking nation has grown considerably in recent years. Amidst continuous statistical growth there has been major structural changes as the arena has attracted a local middle class and the attention of commercial entities. As a result, the profit driven ‘non-traditional’ arena is now the dominant one, centred upon The Asia-Pacific and the Middle-East. This literature review analysed 69 peer-reviewed academic journal papers with regard to their thematic focus, methods, and theoretical frameworks. Three distinct phases of literature can be identified, with a sociological lens appearing after 2012 and a major period of growth beginning in 2015, and a large number of research gaps can be identified.

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Aims and scope


Compare publishes work on the role of education in development and the interaction of the local, the national and the global in education systems and practices.

  • Compare seeks analyses of educational discourse, policy and practice across disciplines, and their implications for teaching, learning and governance.
  • The editors welcome papers which reflect on practice from early childhood to the end of adult life, in formal and non-formal education and learning. All papers should include a comparative and/or international dimension.
  • All papers, including single country case studies, must engage with wider theories and debates in the field of comparative and international education and must include a global perspective. In particular, we are seeking originality and articles that bring a new and fresh perspective to a topic or theory.
  • Case studies of under-researched aspects of the field and countries about which little is known also have our keen interest.
  • Compare is striving to be inclusive of a range of writing genres and knowledge traditions in an effort to engender greater equality/representation in academic publishing.

For a full list of the subject areas this journal covers, please visit the journal website.

Recent articles


Comparative and international education (re)assembled: examining a scholarly field through an assemblage theory lens: edited by Florin D. Salajan and Tavis D. Jules, London, Bloomsbury Academic, 2022, 240 pp., £90.00 (hardback), ISBN 9781350286825
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April 2025





















Cross-cultural insights into youth perceptions of climate change: a comparative study between the US and Vietnam

January 2025

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10 Reads

This study compares climate change perceptions of students from two high schools, one in the United States and one in Vietnam, highlighting the influence of cultural, political, and geographical contexts. Using a cross-sectional survey, it examines students’ understanding of climate change causes, satisfaction with national government responses, and trust in global climate policies. U.S. students demonstrated a strong grasp of scientifically accepted causes but expressed significant dissatisfaction with their government’s climate response efforts. In contrast, Vietnamese students showed moderate satisfaction with national efforts and greater trust in global climate policies, despite some misconceptions about climate change causes. These findings emphasise the need for tailored educational approaches to address climate misconceptions and align with socio-political realities. The study contributes to discussions on education’s role in shaping climate perceptions and informs policies to foster informed, engaged, and proactive youth in addressing global climate challenges.




Teacher education for global competence in the 'post-global' era: a cross-European perspective
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2025

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94 Reads

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3 Citations

This forum paper explores the evolving landscape of teacher education for global competence in a post-global era by adopting a cross-European perspective encompassing Italy, Portugal, and Slovakia. The forum begins with an introduction providing an overview of global competence and its implications for teacher education in a post-global world. The forum then explores how different European societies are adapting their teacher education programmes to cultivate globally competent teachers amidst the resurgence of nationalism and populism. The forum then summarises these arguments, underscoring the challenges and opportunities presented by post-globalisation for teacher education. The paper concludes by advocating for innovative pedagogical strategies and international collaboration to ensure that teacher education programmes remain relevant and responsive to both global and local realities.



Journal metrics


1.6 (2023)

Journal Impact Factor™


26%

Acceptance rate


5.5 (2023)

CiteScore™


62 days

Submission to first decision


14 days

Acceptance to publication


1.860 (2023)

SNIP


0.960 (2023)

SJR

Editors