Special Issue:
Education and the Production of Inequalities:
Perspectives from the Global South and North
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Dear ~~first_name~~,
We are very happy to share the news of the recently published Journal of Sociology Special Issue on 'Education and the Production of Inequalities: Perspectives from the Global South and North' for Volume: 58, Number: 3 (September 2022), guest edited by Denisse Sepúlveda, Manuela Mendoza Horvitz, Sara Joiko, and Francisca Ortiz Ruiz. The editorial abstract is below:
Education is an essential aspect of any society in the world. As such, it has been a topic studied by many sociologists since the origins of the discipline. Today it is one of the most common subjects in sociology, in part because it has been recognised as a crucial environment for the (re)production of inequalities. This article explores the role of education in the (re)production of social inequalities and its potential to challenge such inequalities. In addition, the article presents some of the distinctions between research in the Global South and North, both in geographical and metaphorical terms. Since this article is the introduction to the special issue Education and the Production of Inequalities: Dialogues from the Global South and North, a synopsis of the published articles is presented at the end.
Articles
- Education and the production of inequalities across the Global South and North, Denisse Sepúlveda, Manuela Mendoza Horvitz, Sara Joiko, and Francisca Ortiz Ruiz [OPEN ACCESS]
- Ethics in neoliberalism? Parental responsibility and education policy in Chile and Australia, Juan de Dios Oyarzún, Jessica Gerrard, and Glenn C. Savage
- The role of elite education in social reproduction in France, Belgium and Chile: Towards an analytic model, Marie Verhoeven, Hugues Draelants, and Tomás Ilabaca Turri [OPEN ACCESS]
- Belonging in England today: Schools, race, class and policy, Carol Vincent [OPEN ACCESS]
- Migrant children in a Chilean school: Habitus, discourses and otherness, Andrea Cortés Saavedra [OPEN ACCESS]
- Self-segregation strategies through school choice in Chile: A middle-class domain?, Alejandro Carrasco, Manuela Mendoza, and Carolina Flores
- Clothing and identity: Chinese rural students’ embodied transformations in the urban university, Jiexiu Chen
- A call to rethink the Global North university: Mobilising disabled students’ experiences through the encounter of Critical Disability Studies and Epistemologies of the South, Francesca Peruzzo [OPEN ACCESS]
- The role of an equity policy in the reproduction of social inequalities: High School Ranking and university admissions in Chilie, Ximena Catalán, Maria Veronica Santelices, and Catherine Horn
Book Reviews
- Book Review: Dariusz Jemielniak and Aleksandra Przegalinska, Collaborative Society, Piotr Konieczny
- Book Review: Charles Crothers, Sociologies of New Zealand, Edgar Burns and Adam Rajčan
- Book Review: Kirsten Harley and Gary Wickham, Australian Sociology: Fragility, Survival, Rivalry, Adam Rajčan and Edgar Burns
- Book review: Julie Park, Kathryn Scott, Deon York and Michael Carnaham, Haemophilia in Aotearoa NZ: More than a Bleeding Nuisance, Charles Crothers
| On behalf of the JOS editorial team, I am delighted to announce that the following special issues have been selected for 2024 (in no particular order):
- 'Decolonising Truth Globally: Challenges and Possibilities' with guest editors Yin Paradies, Vanessa Barolsky and Laura Rodriguez Castro;
- 'The Digital Welfare State: Contestations, Considerations and Entanglements' with guest editors Georgia van Toorn, Karen Soldatić and Paul Henman;
- 'Future/Tense: A Sociology of Temporal (Dis)Order' with guest editors Katherine Kenny, Alex Broom, Barbara Prainsack, Michelle Peterie, Leah Williams Veazey, and Stephanie Raymond.
Details about each of the above specials issues will be shared with you as they become available.
| About the Journal of Sociology | Journal of Sociology features high quality sociological scholarship in all its forms. We are dedicated to showcasing theory as well as applied sociology, quantitative and qualitative research. Interdisciplinary pieces are welcome, as are submissions from outside the academy. Based in the Southern Hemisphere and committed to intellectual works from the Asia-Pacific region, including Indigenous scholarship, we also encourage submissions from across the globe.
You can read more about the Journal of Sociology here and keep up-to-date via Twitter: @JSociology | | | |