ABSTRACT

The authors persuasively argue that the present cascade of reforms to public education is a consequence of a larger intention to shrink government. The startling result is that more of public education's assets and resources are moving to the private sector and to the prison industrial complex. Drawing on various forms of evidence-structural, economic, narrative, and youth-generated participatory research-the authors reveal new structures and circuits of dispossession and privilege that amount to a clear failure of present policy. Policymaking is at war with the interests of the vast majority of citizens, and especially with urban youth of color. In the final chapter the authors explore democratic principles and offer examples essential to mobilizing, in solidarity with educators, youth, communities, labor, and allied social movements, the kind of power necessary to contest the present direction of public education reform.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

chapter |20 pages

Restructuring the Teaching Workforce

Attack Rhetoric and Disinvestment as Effective Education Reform in an Era of Economic Decline

chapter |15 pages

Dispossession Stories

chapter |30 pages

Contesting Public Education

Austerity and the Intensifying Fight for a Collective Future