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New scalar politics : implications for education policy

journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by B Lingard, Shaun RawolleShaun Rawolle
This paper argues that globalisation has implications for research and theory in the social sciences, demanding that the social no longer be seen as homologous with nation, but also linked to postnational or global fields. This situation has theoretical and methodological implications for comparative education specifically focused on education policy, which traditionally has taken the nation-state as the unit of analysis, and also worked with 'methodological nationalism'. The paper argues that globalisation has witnessed a rescaling of educational politics and policymaking and relocated some political authority to an emergent global education policy field, with implications for the functioning of national political authority and national education policy fields. This rescaling and this reworking of political authority are illustrated through two cases: the first is concerned with the impact of a globalised policy discourse of the ‘knowledge economy’ proselytised by the OECD and its impact in Australian policy developments; the second is concerned explicitly with the constitution of a global education policy field as a commensurate space of equivalence, as evidenced in the OECD’s PISA and educational indicators work and their increasing global coverage. The paper indicatively utilises Bourdieu’s ‘thinking tools’ to understand the emergent global education policy field and suggest these are very useful for doing comparative education policy analysis.

History

Journal

Comparative education : an international journal of comparative studies

Volume

47

Issue

4

Pagination

489 - 502

Publisher

Routledge

Location

Abingdon, England

ISSN

0305-0068

Language

eng

Notes

Available online 09 June 2011

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Taylor & Francis

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