ABSTRACT

Education, Liberal Democracy and Populism: Arguments from Plato, Locke, Rousseau and Mill provides a lucid and critical guide shedding light on the continuing relevance of earlier thinkers to the debates between populists and liberals about the nature of education in democratic societies.

The book discusses the relationship Rousseau and Plato posited between education and society, and contrasts their work with the development of liberal thinking about education from John Locke, and John Stuart Mill’s arguments for the importance of education to representative democracy. It explores some of the roots of populism and offer a broader perspective from which to assess the questions which populists pose and the answers which liberals offer. The book makes a substantial contribution to the current debate about democracy, by emphasising the central importance of education to political thought and practice, and suggests that only an education system based on liberal democratic principles can offer the possibility of a genuinely free society.

This book is ideal reading for researchers and post-graduate students in education, politics, philosophy and history. It will also be of great interest to Educational practitioners and policy makers.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|23 pages

Populism, education and challenges to liberal order

The crisis of democracy

chapter 2|13 pages

Plato

Two philosophies of education?

chapter 3|26 pages

John Locke

A liberal philosophy of education

chapter 4|33 pages

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Education, Emile and remaking society

chapter 5|20 pages

John Stuart Mill

Education and liberty

chapter 6|26 pages

Education in democratic societies