Despite pervasive forms of racism on a global scale, the field of education and international development continues to fail to substantively engage with the production and effects of racial domination across its domains of research, policy and practice. Considerations of racism remain silent, or indeed, are erased, within teaching and research, often in favour of colour-blind and technocratic approaches to ‘development’. This not only ignores the sector’s historical links to systems of racial domination, but also the current ways in which the field is implicated in producing unequal outcomes along racial lines. The authors present a re-reading of the ‘global learning crisis’ – as the dominant discourse of contemporary educational developmen...
Race and stereotypes remain emotive words in numerous societies. Racism implies that a definitive ps...
At the June 2015 Advisory Board meeting for the SES Race, Racism and Education study the project tea...
We live at a time when our understandings and conceptualizations of ‘racism’ are often highly imprec...
Despite pervasive forms of racism on a global scale, the field of education and international develo...
The Office for Students is now holding UK universities to account for their failures to address raci...
This article suggests that racism, construed as a reified and artificial dichotomization of social b...
Many institutions have found the strength to name racism and seek space for curriculum and other sys...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Wiley via the DOI in this recor
The concept of institutional racism re-emerged in political discourse in the late 1990s after a long...
This paper critically examines the discursive (mis) representation of ‘race’ and racism in the forma...
The paper presents an empirical analysis of education policy in England that is informed by recent d...
Racism is all forms of discrimination and/or disadvantage accruing from processes of racialisation (...
Racism is not a natural phenomenon. Historically, it was socialised into global existence through in...
Education policy in England’s schools is driven by the ‘what works’ agenda, an ideological project w...
Over the past five years numerous headlines have deconstructed racism as a political event. There is...
Race and stereotypes remain emotive words in numerous societies. Racism implies that a definitive ps...
At the June 2015 Advisory Board meeting for the SES Race, Racism and Education study the project tea...
We live at a time when our understandings and conceptualizations of ‘racism’ are often highly imprec...
Despite pervasive forms of racism on a global scale, the field of education and international develo...
The Office for Students is now holding UK universities to account for their failures to address raci...
This article suggests that racism, construed as a reified and artificial dichotomization of social b...
Many institutions have found the strength to name racism and seek space for curriculum and other sys...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Wiley via the DOI in this recor
The concept of institutional racism re-emerged in political discourse in the late 1990s after a long...
This paper critically examines the discursive (mis) representation of ‘race’ and racism in the forma...
The paper presents an empirical analysis of education policy in England that is informed by recent d...
Racism is all forms of discrimination and/or disadvantage accruing from processes of racialisation (...
Racism is not a natural phenomenon. Historically, it was socialised into global existence through in...
Education policy in England’s schools is driven by the ‘what works’ agenda, an ideological project w...
Over the past five years numerous headlines have deconstructed racism as a political event. There is...
Race and stereotypes remain emotive words in numerous societies. Racism implies that a definitive ps...
At the June 2015 Advisory Board meeting for the SES Race, Racism and Education study the project tea...
We live at a time when our understandings and conceptualizations of ‘racism’ are often highly imprec...