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Policy mobilities and methodology: a proposition for inventive methods in education policy studies

Version 2 2024-06-06, 12:03
Version 1 2017-02-25, 06:52
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 12:03 authored by KD Gulson, SD Lewis, B Lingard, C Lubienski, K Takayama, PT Webb
The argument of this paper is that new methodologies associated with the emerging field of ‘policy mobilities’ can be applied, and are in fact required, to examine and research the networked and relational, or ‘topological’, nature of globalised education policy, which cuts across the new spaces of policymaking and new modes of global educational governance. In this paper, we examine the methodological issues pertaining to the study of the movement of policy. Informed by contemporary methodological thinking around social network analysis and the ethnographic notion of ‘following the policy’, we discuss the limitations of these approaches to adequately address presence in policy network analysis, and the problem of representing speed and intensity of policy mobility, even while these attempt to solve the problem of relationality and territoriality. We conclude that the methodologies of policy mobility are inexorably intertwined with the (constantly) changing phenomena under examination, and hence require what Lury and Wakeford describe as ‘inventive methods’.

History

Journal

Critical studies in education

Volume

58

Pagination

224-241

Location

Abingdon, Eng.

ISSN

1750-8487

eISSN

1750-8495

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, CN.1 Other journal article

Copyright notice

2017, Informa UK

Issue

2

Publisher

Taylor & Francis