ABSTRACT

This edited volume explores how Stephen Ball’s work has shaped the field of the sociology of education worldwide.

Written by internationally based researchers who are Ball’s former PhD students, it draws on different strands of his work to show what it means to think, write, and do research inspired by Ball’s theory, methodology, and epistemology. The contributions revolve around a wide range of themes including: the ethics of doing educational research, disability studies, the bio-politics of the child’s soul, lived experiences of marginalisation in education, educating migrant and refugee women in the borderlands, and post-Brexit reflections on the Bologna process. Chapters draw on different lines of thought from the corpus of a significant and influential figure in the sociology of education to present, explicate, and discuss a wide range of research projects, themes, theoretical directions, as well as methodological approaches in the field of the sociology of education today.

More than celebrating Ball’s scholarship, this volume shows new and innovative directions in the sociology of education. It will be highly relevant reading for researchers, scholars, and students in the sociology of education, educational policy, and politics and educational theory.

part I|52 pages

Theoretical and epistemological diffractions

chapter 1|14 pages

Doing Sociology of Education differently

An essay about a study on the educational trajectories of youths from the villas of Buenos Aires

chapter 2|19 pages

Character as calculable

The performative and biopolitical management of the child's soul

chapter 3|18 pages

Knowledge exchange in the social sciences

Knowledge ecosystems, networks, and the social enterprising of research

part II|58 pages

Thinking and acting in the margins

chapter 5|18 pages

Trapped in educational marginalisation

‘I just drifted away’

chapter 6|15 pages

Borderlands and radical hope

Beyond academic philanthropy

part III|54 pages

Educational policies

chapter 8|16 pages

Policy and the ethics of doing disability

Working within and beyond an inclusive norm in the English higher education

chapter 9|18 pages

The Bologna Process

A policy discourse evolution

part IV|23 pages

Reflections

chapter 10|10 pages

Passion and education

A reflection on working with Stephen J. Ball

chapter 11|12 pages

The exclusionary every day

A journey in London schools, struggling to include all children in their primary school education