Policy makers internationally are increasingly preoccupied with the need for education systems to be developed in ways that mitigate unfairness. What is more contestable is what might need to change. In England this emphasis has informed the development of fair access policies that aim to improve the representation of ‘disadvantaged’ young people of high ‘potential’ at high status universities. Drawing on research conducted at the inception of one fair access intervention, this paper provides original insights into a process of policy translation that requires multiple encodings and decodings of two constructs that defy ready definition, with their intersection being a particular point of difficulty. Behind the apparent objectivity of commo...
This is an article about secondary schools in England, and what type of school is fair and efficient...
This paper considers the history of access to higher education in England and reviews the evidence o...
This chapter presents an alternative view of marketised higher education form much of this volume: n...
This paper explores English universities’ responses to widening participation policy developments. I...
The higher education regulators for England have set challenging new widening access targets requiri...
This paper explores how fairness was conceptualised by those responsible for admission to highly sel...
Despite significant public investment in the sector, selective universities in the UK have made litt...
This paper argues that the introduction of access agreements following the establishment of the Offi...
Fairness in education means different things. On the one hand it is being treated the same and achie...
This paper is concerned with the policy context of the idea of fair access to higher education. I ar...
This article uses a discourse analysis of access policy statements to trace the impact of differenti...
'Widening participation' and 'fair access' have been contested policy areas in English higher educat...
Concerns over equity of access to higher education are widespread, but there is significant disagree...
This paper discusses a research project which sought to find out about young people’s views on fairn...
Attempts to make higher education more equitable more readily succeed at the aggregate (sector) leve...
This is an article about secondary schools in England, and what type of school is fair and efficient...
This paper considers the history of access to higher education in England and reviews the evidence o...
This chapter presents an alternative view of marketised higher education form much of this volume: n...
This paper explores English universities’ responses to widening participation policy developments. I...
The higher education regulators for England have set challenging new widening access targets requiri...
This paper explores how fairness was conceptualised by those responsible for admission to highly sel...
Despite significant public investment in the sector, selective universities in the UK have made litt...
This paper argues that the introduction of access agreements following the establishment of the Offi...
Fairness in education means different things. On the one hand it is being treated the same and achie...
This paper is concerned with the policy context of the idea of fair access to higher education. I ar...
This article uses a discourse analysis of access policy statements to trace the impact of differenti...
'Widening participation' and 'fair access' have been contested policy areas in English higher educat...
Concerns over equity of access to higher education are widespread, but there is significant disagree...
This paper discusses a research project which sought to find out about young people’s views on fairn...
Attempts to make higher education more equitable more readily succeed at the aggregate (sector) leve...
This is an article about secondary schools in England, and what type of school is fair and efficient...
This paper considers the history of access to higher education in England and reviews the evidence o...
This chapter presents an alternative view of marketised higher education form much of this volume: n...