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Annelies Kamp – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2024
This article takes up an ANTian sensibility to explore the enactment of a policy for educational collaboration in one region in the South Island of Aotearoa New Zealand (New Zealand). The case offers potential for considering the benefits of a sociology of associations (Latour 2005/2007): a Treaty-based bicultural nation, school atomisation…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Educational Change, Seismology
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Courtney, Steven J. – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2016
In this paper, I draw on a study of school leaders' experiences of inspection to argue that repeated changes to school inspection policy in England constitute a post-panoptic regime. Thinking with and against Foucault, I elaborate post-panopticism, here characterised by: subjects' visibility; "fuzzy" norms; the exposure of subjects'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Inspection, Accountability, Educational Change
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Goodson, Ivor. F.; Rudd, Tim – Educational Practice and Theory, 2016
There is a good deal of ongoing debate about the effects and impacts of globalisation. Many educational theorists (e.g., Meyer et al., 1997) have argued that there is a world systems model at work (see Wallerstein, 2004). And we would agree that a convergent global rhetoric for education has emerged in the neoliberal period. However, whilst at the…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Resistance to Change, Social Change, Neoliberalism
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Davis, Robert A. – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay, Robert Davis argues that much of the moral anxiety currently surrounding children in Europe and North America emerges at ages and stages curiously familiar from traditional Western constructions of childhood. The symbolism of infancy has proven enduringly effective over the last two centuries in associating the earliest years of…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Child Rearing, Infants, Access to Education
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Buras, Kristen L. – Harvard Educational Review, 2011
In this article, Kristen L. Buras examines educational policy formation in New Orleans and the racial, economic, and spatial dynamics shaping the city's reconstruction since 2005. More specifically, Buras draws on the critical theories of whiteness as property, accumulation by dispossession, and urban space economy to describe the strategic…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Racial Factors
Fiala, Thomas J.; Owens, Deborah Duncan – Online Submission, 2010
The purpose of this paper is to examine the impact of neoliberal ideology, and in particular, the economic and social theories of Milton Friedman on education policy. The paper takes a critical theoretical approach in that ultimately the paper is an ideological critique of conservative thought and action that impacts twenty-first century education…
Descriptors: Free Enterprise System, Ideology, Educational Change, Educational Vouchers
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Bridges, David – Educational Theory, 2010
In this essay David Bridges argues that since most families choose to realize their responsibility for the major part of their children's education through state schools, then the way in which the state constructs parents' relation with these schools is one of its primary levers on parenting itself. Bridges then examines the way in which…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Social Class, Child Rearing, Educational Change
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Hatcher, Richard; Jones, Ken – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2006
This article uses social movement theory to analyse campaigns against a new type of government-sponsored school--the Academy--in four areas of England. It seeks to identify the social composition of anti-Academy campaigns, to track their encounters with proponents of the new schools and to describe the characteristic forms of their campaigning…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Resistance to Change, Educational Innovation, Social Theories