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National gender equity and schooling policy in Australia: struggles for a non-identitarian feminist politics

journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by Amanda KeddieAmanda Keddie
This paper tracks the development of gender equity and schooling policy in Australia from theNational Policy on the Education of Girls in 1987, to current policy concerns with boys’ educational underperformance. The paper’s key focus is on the ways in which feminist informed equity policy has been undermined by broader imperatives of economic rationalism and anti-feminist discourses. Drawing on Nancy Fraser’s understandings of distributive and cultural gender justice and her notion of a nonidentitarian feminist politics, the paper critically examines the ways in which such imperatives have re-articulated equity and schooling concerns. Through these lenses, the limitations of the affirmative gender binary politics and remedies that have dominated gender and schooling reform in Australia are highlighted. The paper concludes with an illumination of the gender justice spaces currently being mobilised in Australian schools. Such spaces, it is argued, fostered within a context of increasing autonomy and self-management for schools, are providing avenues for creative and disruptive (pro)feminist activism.

History

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  1. 1.

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, Australian Association for Research in Education

Journal

Australian educational researcher

Volume

36

Pagination

21-37

ISSN

0311-6999

eISSN

2210-5328

Issue

2

Publisher

Springer