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Saltman, Kenneth J. – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2015
This commentary suggests that a countermovement for educational and social justice must learn from the dominant global neo-liberal movement and its successes in creating institutions and knowledge-making processes and networks. Local struggles for educational justice are important, but they need to be linked to a broader educational justice…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Social Justice, Global Approach, Networks
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Frankenberg, Erica – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2011
The idea of charter schools arose as a means to allow for innovation by creating schools that were free from traditional regulations, but were held accountable for their performance. More recently, however, charter school advocates have suggested that increasing school choice options will create competition that improves the quality of education…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, School Choice, Access to Education, Racial Segregation
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Strike, Kenneth – Theory and Research in Education, 2010
This article looks at charter schools from the perspective of distributive justice. It suggests three principles of distributive justice that should be satisfied by schools: the adequacy principle, the equity principle, and the communicative principle. "It also sketches the justice argument for charter schools and uses the three principles to…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, School Restructuring, Social Justice, School Choice
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Giesinger, Johannes – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2009
In his writings on school choice and educational justice, Harry Brighouse presents normative evaluations of various choice systems. This paper responds to Brighouse's claim that it is inadequate to criticise these evaluations with reference to empirical data concerning the effects of school choice.
Descriptors: School Choice, Social Justice, Policy Analysis, Evaluation Methods
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Coons, John E. – Journal of School Choice, 2010
Every child gets assigned to a public or private school chosen by some adult. The question is which adult should hold that authority by law and exercise it in practice. Our Federal Constitution recognizes the authority of custodial parents; but our systems of tax-based schools effectively dethrone working-class parents and the poor; most of whose…
Descriptors: Children, Empowerment, School Choice, Parent Rights
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Murray, Dale – Theory and Research in Education, 2009
While political philosophers have paid a great deal of attention to providing a theory of secession for cases of nations breaking away from nation-states, little has been said about perhaps the most common type of secession--school district secession. I argue that while there is no principled prohibition against school district secession, there…
Descriptors: School Districts, Politics of Education, Equal Education, Educational Finance
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Smyth, John – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2008
Australia has been one of the countries to most enthusiastically embrace the neo-liberal conditions conducive to the dismantling of equitably provided public schooling. The article argues that part of the explanation for the absence of any effective challenge to this trajectory lies in the contradictory nature of the Australian identity. The…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Private Education, Middle Class, School Choice
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Clayton, Matthew; Stevens, David – Theory and Research in Education, 2004
This paper takes issue with Swift's argument for the claim that parents who affirm equality of opportunity can justifiably buy advantageous private schooling if it is necessary to ensure educational adequacy for their children. We advance a number of reasons of justice and morality that support the view that egalitarian parents ought to accept a…
Descriptors: School Choice, Social Justice, Equal Education, Private Schools
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Swift, Adam – Theory and Research in Education, 2004
I reply to the more philosophical critiques of "How Not to Be a Hypocrite" (2003), published in this volume of "Theory and Research in Education". Against Elizabeth Anderson, I claim that unequal chances are unfair, and unfairness is bad, but acknowledge that its badness can be outweighed by other values. Distinguishing principled from empirical…
Descriptors: Private Schools, School Choice, Moral Values, Social Values
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Swift, Adam – Theory and Research in Education, 2004
Summarising the arguments of "How Not to Be A Hypocrite: School Choice for the Morally Perplexed Parent" (Routledge Falmer 2003), the article discusses three questions. The first is whether parents who disapprove of elite private schools to such an extent that they would vote to ban them are acting hypocritically or inconsistently with…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Parent Attitudes, Decision Making, Private Schools