ABSTRACT

The ongoing neoliberalisation of education is complex, varied and relentless. It involves increasingly diverse material and structural changes to curriculum, pedagogy and assessment and at the same time transforms how we are made up as educational subjects. It rearticulates what it means to be educated. This collection brings together creative and unanticipated examples of the adoption and adaptation of neoliberal practice, both collective and individual. These examples not only demonstrate the insidiousness of neoliberal reform but also suggest that its trajectory is uncertain and unfixed. The intention is that these examples might embolden education scholars and practitioners to think differently about education.

This book is shaped by a reading of the processes of the neoliberalisation of education as a dispositif. This heterogeneous dispositif encompasses and spans an uneven, miscellaneous and evolving network of educational regimes of knowledge, practice and subjectivities, as well as artifacts and non-human actants. The papers included address different aspects or points within this complex arrangement at different levels and in different sectors of education. They have been chosen to illustrate the evolving and multi-faceted penetration of market thinking and practice in education and also points of deflection and dissent. They also offer coverage of some of the uneven geography of neoliberalisation. They consider the potential for the production of subjectivities to provide the ‘wriggle’ room that can exist to refuse or subvert neoliberal identities. This book will have appeal across the social sciences and specifically to those working in education. The chapters included here were originally published in various Taylor & Francis journals.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Neoliberalism is dead—Long live neoliberalism

chapter |19 pages

Neoliberalization, uneven development, and Brexit

Further reflections on the organic crisis of the British state and society

chapter |16 pages

Neoliberalism, urbanism and the education economy

Producing Hyderabad as a ‘global city’

chapter |21 pages

Neoliberalism and the demise of public education

The corporatization of schools of education

chapter |19 pages

Fixing contradictions of education commercialisation

Pearson plc and the construction of its efficacy brand

chapter |13 pages

‘Make money, get money’

How two autonomous schools have commercialised their services

chapter |14 pages

Preoccupied with the self

Towards self-responsible, enterprising, flexible and self-centered subjectivity in education