Market Politics and Education

The struggle continues... A short piece of mine on the Australian government's thousand-cuts approach to university education has just been published on the New Matilda website, you can find it here: Uni Cuts.

A longer piece about neoliberalism in education has just been published too:

Raewyn Connell, "The neoliberal cascade and education: an essay on the market agenda and its consequences," Critical Studies in Education, 2013, vol. 54 no. 2, pp. 99-112. Here is the abstract:


Education has been powerfully affected by the rise of a neoliberal political, economic and cultural agenda. The Australian experience since the 1980s is outlined. Educators 
need to understand neoliberalism, and also to think about the nature of education itself, 
as a social process of nurturing capacities for practice. Education itself cannot be commodified; but access to education can be. Markets require a rationing of education, and 
the creation of hierarchies and mechanisms of competition. Hence, the redefinition of 
schools and universities as firms, and the striking revival of competitive testing, as well 
as the expansion of public funding of private schools. Teachers are placed under performative pressures that tend to narrow the curriculum in schools, and make the sector’s 
workforce more insecure. Even the knowledge base of education is impacted, with technicization of professional knowledge and a growth of cultural fakery around education. 
Bases for alternatives exist, but have not yet found institutional articulation.



Keywords: education as commodity; education systems; markets in education;
neoliberalism; standardized testing; teacher accountability

Master Builders: thoughts on masculinity research

The journal Australian Feminist Studies (vol. 28, no. 75, 2013) has just published a special issue on masculinity research and debates in Australia.  I have an essay in it: 'Master Builders: Research on Men and Masculinities and Directions for Australian Theory and Practice.'  It discusses Australian work, but reflects more generally on the history of the field and especially southern perspectives.  Here is the opening paragraph, explaining the title:

Research on men and masculinities is not just an academic exercise. It deals with issues of practical importance and widespread cultural interest, which are explored in many media besides research. One of the most striking examples is The Master Builder, by the founder of modern European drama, Henrik Ibsen. This play, first performed in 1892, is one of the great allegories of modern masculinity. It is not quite as famous as A Doll House, and its central figure is not quite as iconic as Nora, whose slamming door at the end of Act III became an international symbol of women's emancipation. Nevertheless, the protagonist Halvard Solness does represent a significant type of masculinity emerging in European modernity. 


The first fifty people can get a free copy of the rest from:

http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/tDfHkqhVXs5YE5iWejnE/full
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