ABSTRACT

This edited collection examines the ways in which the local and global are key to understanding race and racism in the intersectional context of contemporary education. Analysing a broad range of examples, it highlights how race and racism is a relational phenomenon, that interconnects local, national and global contexts and ideas.

The current educational climate is subject to global influences and the effects of conservative, hyper-nationalist politics and neoliberal economic rationalising in local settings that are creating new formations of race and racism. While focused predominantly on Australia and southern world or settler colonial contexts, the book aims to constructively contribute to broader emerging research and debates about race and education. Through the adoption of a relational framing, it draws the Australian context into the global conversation about race and racism in education in ways that challenge and test current understandings of the operation of race and racism in contemporary social and educational spaces. Importantly, it also pushes debates about race and racism in education and research to the foreground in Australia where such debates are typically dismissed or cursorily engaged.

The book will guide readers as they navigate issues of race in education research and practice, and its chapters will serve as provocations designed to assist in critically understanding this challenging field. It reaches beyond education scholarship, as concerns to do with race remain intertwined with wider social justice issues such as access to housing, health, social/economic mobility, and political representation.

chapter 2|19 pages

PISA, tiger parenting and private coaching

The discursive construction of ‘the Asian’ in the globalised education policy field

chapter 3|14 pages

Decolonising race theory

Place, survivance and sovereignty

chapter 5|13 pages

Beyond ‘getting along’

Understanding embodied whiteness in educational spaces

chapter 6|13 pages

White microaffirmations in the classroom

Encounters with everyday race-making

chapter 7|12 pages

The raced space of learning and teaching

Aboriginal voices speak back to the university

chapter 8|11 pages

‘I have walked many miles in these shoes’

Interrogating racialised subject positions through the stories we tell

chapter 10|12 pages

What if racism is a permanent feature of this society?

Exploring the potential of racial realism for education researchers

chapter 12|11 pages

The past in the present

Identifying the violence of success and the relief of failure

chapter 13|14 pages

What does theory matter?

Conceptualising race critical research

chapter 14|5 pages

Afterword

Critical Education for Critical Times