Critical global development studies and work placement: A pedagogical citizenship approach

Critical Global development studies (CGDS), built on theoretical foundations in pedagogical citizenship, is widely dismissed for faring poorly in terms of educating students for employment in the ‘real world’. It is usually alleged that there is a misallignment between the skill set of CGDS students...

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Main Author: Franklin Obeng-Odoom
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-12-01
Series:Research in Globalization
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590051X2500036X
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author Franklin Obeng-Odoom
author_facet Franklin Obeng-Odoom
author_sort Franklin Obeng-Odoom
collection DOAJ
description Critical Global development studies (CGDS), built on theoretical foundations in pedagogical citizenship, is widely dismissed for faring poorly in terms of educating students for employment in the ‘real world’. It is usually alleged that there is a misallignment between the skill set of CGDS students and the competencies required for work. But there is dearth of empirical evidence with which to verify the attacks on CGDS. Specifically, how do CGDS students experience work and what are employers’ experiences of working with critical development studies students? Drawing on a thematic analysis of more than 100 reflections by CGDS interns and their employers, this paper shows that most of these interns find internships rewarding, and employers consider CGDS to be competent. CGDs interns are typically described as ‘capable’, ‘quick to learn’, ‘innovative’, ‘independent-minded’ and yet excellent at ‘teamwork’. Employers also commonly describe those CGDS interns who work in research institutions and think tanks as ‘analytical’. This empirical evidence refutes the attacks on CDGS. As CGDS students work in all sectors of society – from private and public to the third sector across the world, these results suggest that CGDS students contribute constructively to reconstructing societies. Overall, the evidence shows that there is room for more, not less, critical global development studies.
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spelling doaj-art-59fc8f09b4a7464aa522b7c5abdfd9892025-08-20T02:56:39ZengElsevierResearch in Globalization2590-051X2025-12-011110030310.1016/j.resglo.2025.100303Critical global development studies and work placement: A pedagogical citizenship approachFranklin Obeng-Odoom0Global Development Studies, University of Helsinki, FinlandCritical Global development studies (CGDS), built on theoretical foundations in pedagogical citizenship, is widely dismissed for faring poorly in terms of educating students for employment in the ‘real world’. It is usually alleged that there is a misallignment between the skill set of CGDS students and the competencies required for work. But there is dearth of empirical evidence with which to verify the attacks on CGDS. Specifically, how do CGDS students experience work and what are employers’ experiences of working with critical development studies students? Drawing on a thematic analysis of more than 100 reflections by CGDS interns and their employers, this paper shows that most of these interns find internships rewarding, and employers consider CGDS to be competent. CGDs interns are typically described as ‘capable’, ‘quick to learn’, ‘innovative’, ‘independent-minded’ and yet excellent at ‘teamwork’. Employers also commonly describe those CGDS interns who work in research institutions and think tanks as ‘analytical’. This empirical evidence refutes the attacks on CDGS. As CGDS students work in all sectors of society – from private and public to the third sector across the world, these results suggest that CGDS students contribute constructively to reconstructing societies. Overall, the evidence shows that there is room for more, not less, critical global development studies.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590051X2500036XWork placementGlobal development studiesHuman capital theoryPedagogical citizenship
spellingShingle Franklin Obeng-Odoom
Critical global development studies and work placement: A pedagogical citizenship approach
Research in Globalization
Work placement
Global development studies
Human capital theory
Pedagogical citizenship
title Critical global development studies and work placement: A pedagogical citizenship approach
title_full Critical global development studies and work placement: A pedagogical citizenship approach
title_fullStr Critical global development studies and work placement: A pedagogical citizenship approach
title_full_unstemmed Critical global development studies and work placement: A pedagogical citizenship approach
title_short Critical global development studies and work placement: A pedagogical citizenship approach
title_sort critical global development studies and work placement a pedagogical citizenship approach
topic Work placement
Global development studies
Human capital theory
Pedagogical citizenship
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590051X2500036X
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