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Bringing Bourdieu to policy sociology : codification, misrecognition and exchange value in the UK context

journal contribution
posted on 2005-11-01, 00:00 authored by P Thomson
The task of social scientists is to find ways of investigating and understanding the social, political and economic world, in order to offer insights into everyday and public life in the past, present and future. Bourdieu’s tool kit offers a particular way of theorizing the rules, narratives and self-held truths of social phenomena and of educational policy as a specific object of analysis. In this article I develop a series of propositions about the ways in which field theory might be applied to explain the abrupt public policy shift effected by the Thatcher government and the adjustments made to it by the Blair government. I suggest that a Bourdieuian approach shows policy working as a means of codification, as a doxa of misrecognition and as currency exchange within and across fields. I conclude with some thoughts about the difficulties of explicating interactions between fields.<br>

History

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Location

Abingdon, England

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, Taylor & Francis

Journal

Journal of education policy

Volume

20

Pagination

741-758

ISSN

0268-0939

eISSN

1464-5106

Issue

6

Publisher

Routledge

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