ABSTRACT

Breaking new ground in studies of business involvement in schooling, Capitalizing on Disaster dissects the most powerful educational reforms and highlights their relationship to the rise of powerful think tanks and business groups. Over the past several decades, there has been a strong movement to privatize public schooling through business ventures. At the beginning of the millennium, this privatization project looked moribund as both the Edison Schools and Knowledge Universe foundered. Nonetheless, privatization is back. The new face of educational privatization replaces public schooling with EMOs, vouchers, and charter schools at an alarming rate. In both disaster and nondisaster areas, officials designate schools as failed in order to justify replacement with new, unproven models. Saltman examines how privatization policies such as No Child Left Behind are designed to deregulate schools, favoring business while undermining public oversight. Examining current policies in New Orleans, Chicago, and Iraq, Capitalizing on Disaster shows how the struggle for public schooling is essential to the struggle for a truly democratic society.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction Smash and Grab

Schooling in Disaster Capitalism

chapter 1|48 pages

Silver Linings and Golden Opportunities

The Corporate Plunder of Public Schooling in Post-Katrina New Orleans

chapter 2|50 pages

Creative Associates International, Incorporated

Corporate Schooling and “Democracy Promotion” in Iraq

chapter 3|35 pages

Renaissance 2010 and No Child Left Behind

Breaking and Taking Schools and Communities

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion From Dispossession to Possession

Making Educational Facts on the Ground