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Showing 1 to 15 of 83 results Save | Export
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Wang, Geng – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2023
Government reports and documents claim that building a high skill society is critical for national success in China. In this paper, eight policies in relation to the government's espoused priorities of upskilling are examined. Applying the principles of critical policy analysis, the paper aims to expose the ideological presuppositions made in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Labor Force Development, Job Skills, Skill Development
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Tapia, Carla; Singh, Parlo; Whatman, Susan; Bargallie, Debbie – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2023
While much has been written about student movements against the neoliberal privatisation of education in Chile, less attention has been given to teacher activism around similar educational matters. In this article, we contribute to the field of teacher activism as a social movement to resist the global education reforms of neoliberal education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Activism, Public Education, Privatization
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Castelao-Huerta, Isaura – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2023
This article examines the case of women full professors in a gendered and neoliberalised context to propose the concept of "complex reflexivity." This concept refers to an internal conversation and accounts for the practical way in which people may ponder their ambiguities and contradictions. This paper presents the concrete experiences…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Females, Neoliberalism, Psychological Patterns
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Ideland, Malin; Serder, Margareta – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2023
This study focuses on what people working in edu-business want to achieve. The aim is to explore (1) how the edu-business sector is discursively constructed as a work-place and part of the education system, and (2) how this discourse is organized within an affective economy -- that is how the valuation of emotions distinguish what are considered…
Descriptors: Commercialization, Foreign Countries, Neoliberalism, Psychological Patterns
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Zhuang, Tengteng; Kong, Xiangyuan – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2023
This study examines how Chinese postgraduate students' personal worldviews are separately and collectively shaped by the interplay of neoliberalism, Confucianism and patriotism. The findings reveal that neoliberalism contributes to Chinese postgraduates' enterprising self by shaping their subjectivity in pursuing personal goals, influencing their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Graduate Students, World Views, Influences
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Andrea Riedemann; Fernanda Stang; Sara Joiko; Josefina Palma; Antonia Garcés – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2023
While Chile currently commemorates 50 years since the 1973 coup, it is also immersed in the process of writing a new Constitution to replace that of 1980, which is responsible for the all over present neoliberalism, including the education system. The constituent process is a direct consequence of the social outburst of 2019. In this context, this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Colonialism, Nationalism, Neoliberalism
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Redmond, Gerry; Skattebol, Jennifer; Hamilton, Myra; Andresen, Sabine; Woodman, Richard – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
Young people are encouraged to take responsibility for their educational outcomes by actively engaging in their education (their 'project-of-self'), but many also take responsibility for the care of family members who have serious health concerns (their 'project-of-family'). Drawing on the concepts of responsibilisation and neoliberal governance,…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Self Concept, Child Responsibility, Family Relationship
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Liu, Junyan; Bray, Mark – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
Growing literatures highlight global shifts in education brought by spreading neoliberal values and marketisation. Parallel literatures address parenting styles. Parents, these literatures observe, are increasingly made responsible and/or voluntarily take responsibility for educational inputs alongside mainstream schooling. Much parental…
Descriptors: Parent Responsibility, Private Education, Tutoring, Supplementary Education
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Guzmán-Valenzuela, Carolina; Darwin, Stephen; Flanagan, Andrea; Aguilera-Muñoz, Almendra; Geldres, Andrea – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
In highly marketised higher education systems, massification has afforded greater access, particularly for first-in-generation students. Generally, this expansion has been fuelled by neoliberal ideologies that valorise the notion of choice and promise of social mobility. In this study, using interviews with 25 first-generation students, the issue…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Higher Education, Neoliberalism, Social Mobility
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Myers, Martin – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
The use of zero-hours contracts (ZHCs) has been associated with the transfer of risk away from corporate employers and towards individual employees. In universities increasing numbers of teaching staff are employed on such contracts. Academics from Black and minority ethnic backgrounds (BME) are disproportionately more likely to be employed on…
Descriptors: Racism, Contracts, College Faculty, Minority Group Teachers
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Oliver, Catherine; Morris, Amelia – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
Academic conferences have a central role in shaping career trajectories, reproducing or resisting exclusions and moulding relations in and to academia, thus shaping academic networks. In this paper, we consider how precarious academics subvert and navigate conference spaces, including emerging online forms. Particularly, we explore how academic…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Conferences (Gatherings), Social Networks, Friendship
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Villar-Aguilés, Alícia; Obiol-Francés, Sandra – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2022
This paper presents a case study of a Spanish university that sheds light on the precarious nature of many academic posts. It looks at how women academics build their careers in the current neoliberal university, which measures scholarly output through the indexing metric. Application of this yardstick renders many academic careers all the more…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Faculty Publishing, Family Work Relationship, Parent Child Relationship
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Kulz, Christy – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
Since the late 1970s, Britain has moved from a Keynesian welfare state model toward a mode of governance where economic reasoning replaces politics. Education in England has not escaped this shift from government to governance described as neoliberalism. This shift toward a new governing rationality has taken shape within the English education…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Charter Schools, Politics of Education, Governance
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Watermeyer, Richard; Shankar, Kalpana; Crick, Tom; Knight, Cathryn; McGaughey, Fiona; Hardman, Joanna; Suri, Venkata Ratnadeep; Chung, Roger; Phelan, Dean – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
Universities in the UK, and in other countries like Australia and the USA, have responded to the operational and financial challenges presented by the COVID-19 pandemic by prioritising institutional solvency and enforcing changes to the work practices and profiles of their staff. For academics, an adjustment to institutional life under COVID-19…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Universities
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Bereményi, Bálint Ábel; Girós-Calpe, Roser – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
This paper discusses Romani mentors' mixed experiences, views and coping practices in an intra-ethnic 'natural mentoring' project targeting young Romani (more commonly known as 'Gypsy') students in Spain. The intervention transforms already existing intra-ethnic bonds into mentorships in local Spanish Romani communities. To meet the aims of this…
Descriptors: Mentors, Minority Groups, Competence, Sociocultural Patterns
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