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Educational Governance, Social Inclusion and Social Exclusion in Australia: an overview for the symposium at the 2000 AARE Conference, Sydney

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-05-10, 11:43 authored by James G. Ladwig, Jennifer GoreJennifer Gore, Bob Lingard, Tom G. Griffiths, Kellie Morrison, Sharon Cooper
'Educational Governance, Social Inclusion and Social Exclusion in Australia' (EGSIE-Australia) is the Australian leg of a large international comparative study examining the relationship between relatively recent restructuring of systems of schooling and the classic sociological question of who gets what from schooling. The study draws conceptions of governance and subjectivity developed in relation to Foucault's understanding of governmentality and Bourdieu's analyses of habitus and the State as a bureaucratic field. Conducted in three main stages, EGSIE-Australia included text analyses of selected policy documents, interviews with a national sample of teachers, principals and systems actors, and a series of youth studies, including a large scale survey of Youth. Funded by the ARC, from 1998 to 2000, this study has been conducted in partnership with scholars from nine European countries, in which parallel analyses have been developed. The symposium presents six papers developed within the study, cutting across each of the three main stages of analysis.

History

Source title

Proceedings of the AARE 2000 Conference

Name of conference

AARE 2000 Conference

Location

Sydney

Start date

2000-12-04

End date

2000-12-07

Editors

Jeffery, P. L.

Publisher

Australian Association for Research in Education (AARE)

Place published

Coldstream, Vic.

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Education and Arts

School

School of Education

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