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Kenway, Jane; Fahey, Johannah – Journal of Education Policy, 2010
We seek to contribute to political and policy analyses of globalisation by attending to global flows of emotions and by developing the concept global emoscapes. In so doing we build on Arjun Appadurai's theorisation of the disjunctive scapes of the global cultural economy. As a way of illustrating the benefits of our approach, we deploy it to…
Descriptors: Relationship, Politics, Educational Policy, Psychological Patterns
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Kenway, Jane; McLeod, Julie – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2004
This paper considers Bourdieu's concepts of perspectivism and reflexivity, looking particularly at how he develops arguments about these in his recent work, The Weight of the World (1999) and Pascalian Meditations (2000b). We explicate Bourdieu's distinctive purposes and deployment of these terms and approaches, and discuss how this compares with…
Descriptors: Sociology, Feminism, Social Theories, Perspective Taking
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Bullen, Elizabeth; Fahey, Johannah; Kenway, Jane – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2006
The knowledge economy is a dominant force in today's world, and innovation policy and national systems of innovation are central to it. In this article, we draw on different sociological and economic theories of risk to engage critically with innovation policy and national systems of innovation. Beck's understanding of a risk society, Schumpeter's…
Descriptors: Innovation, Information Technology, Risk, Policy Analysis
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Rasmussen, Mary Lou; Kenway, Jane – Journal of Gay & Lesbian Issues in Education, 2004
This article explores ways of queering the youthful cyberflaneur, using the television series "Queer as Folk" as the touchstone for such explorations. The concept of the youthful cyberflaneur, as developed by Kenway and Bullen, links power, pleasure, and consumer politics to pedagogy. However, it has been criticised for its heterosexist register.…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Sexuality, Homosexuality, Television Viewing
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Bullen, Elizabeth; Kenway, Jane – Theory and Research in Education, 2005
It is a contention of the culturalist strand of underclass theory that the growth of the underclass is not a function of social and economic change, but of features intrinsic to underclass culture. Children born into disadvantaged communities, it is argued, are socialized into the "deviant" culture of their families, families typically headed by…
Descriptors: Mothers, Daughters, Disadvantaged, Socioeconomic Influences