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E-grāmata: Challenges for Public Education: Reconceptualising Educational Leadership, Policy and Social Justice as Resources for Hope

Edited by (Monash University, Australia), Edited by , Edited by (University of New South Wales, Australia)
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An accelerating pattern in Australia and internationally is the dismantling of public education systems as part of a long-standing trend towards the modernisation, marketisation and privatisation of educational provision. Responsibility for direct delivery of education services has been shifted to contracting and monitoring under the clarion call of school and leadership autonomy and parental choice. Part of this pattern is an increasing blurring of boundaries between the state and private sector, a move from government to new forms of strategic governance, and from hierarchy to heterarchy.

Challenges for Public Education examines the educational leadership, policy and social justice implications of these trends in Australia and internationally. It maps this movement through early shifts to school-based management in Australia, New Zealand and Sweden and recent moves such as the academies programme in England and charter schools in the United States. It draws on recent studies of a distinct new phase in Australian school reform the creation of independent public schools (IPS) in Western Australia and Queensland and global policy moves in public education in order to provide a truly international dialogue and debate on these matters.

This book moves beyond critique. It innovatively brings together Australian and international perspectives and a rich range of diverse theoretical lenses: practice philosophy, feminism, gender, relational, and postmodernism. As such, it provides a crucial forum for illuminating alternate ways to conceptualise educational leadership, policy and social justice as resources for hope.
List of illustrations
vii
Acknowledgements viii
Series editors' preface ix
1 Challenges for public education: Perils and possibilities for educational leadership, policy and social justice
1(14)
Jane Wilkinson
Scott Eocott
Richard Niesche
PART I Theoretical possibilities
15(42)
2 Re-imagining leadership as a resource of and for educational practice/praxis in neoliberal times
17(14)
Jane Wilkinson
3 School and principal autonomy: Resisting, not manufacturing, the neoliberal subject
31(13)
Richard Niesche
4 Educational leadership research and the dismantling of public education: A relational approach
44(13)
Scott Eacott
PART II Local/international cases: Competing practices of a school autonomy reform
57(102)
5 Competitive entrepreneuiship and community empowerment: Competing practices of a school autonomy reform
59(14)
Brad Gabby
6 Exploring a school improvement initiative: Leadership and policy enactment in Queensland's Independent Public Schools
73(14)
Amanda Heffeman
7 Depoliticisation and education policy
87(14)
Helen M. Gnnter
8 Oh to be in England?: The production of an un-public state system
101(15)
Pat Thomson
9 Shifting logics: Education and privatisation the Swedish way
116(16)
Nafsika Alexiadoii
Lisbeth Lundakl
Linda Ronnbera
10 To be `in the tent' or abandon it?: A school clusters policy and the responses of New Zealand educational leaders
132(13)
Martin Thrupp
11 The rise of authoritarian neoliberalism: How neoliberalism threatens public education and democracy
145(14)
David Hursh
PART III Critical commentary: Alan Reid
159(18)
12 Restoring the `publicness' of public education
161(16)
Alan Reid
Index 177
Jane Wilkinson is Associate Professor of Educational Leadership, Monash University, Australia. She researches educational leadership as practice/praxis. Janes new book is Educational Leadership as a Culturally-constructed Practice: New Directions and Possibilities (with Laurette Bristol, Routledge, 2018). She is lead editor (with Jeffrey S. Brooks) of the Journal of Educational Administration and History.

Richard Niesche is Senior Lecturer in the School of Education at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. His research interests include educational leadership, social justice and poststructuralism. He is a founding co-editor of the Educational Leadership Theory book series with Springer.

Scott Eacott is a relational theorist in the School of Education, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. He is widely published with research interests and contributions in three main areas: 1) a relational approach to organizational theory; 2) social epistemology; and 3) school reform.