This article uses Foucauldian discourse analysis to identify two subject positions within Australia\u27s Widening Participation higher education policy. Purpose The massification of higher education is a definitive feature of the late twentieth century. Widening Participation (WP) policy is a recent manifestation of this phenomenon in Britain and Australia. This article uses Foucauldian discourse analysis to identify two subject positions within Australian WP higher education policy, that of the cap(able) individual and the proper aspirant. The article also traces the feeling-rules associated with these subject positions to ask critical questions about neo-liberal social justice. Design/methodology/approach A Foucauldian discourse analy...
Widening participation has been a vehicle to facilitate access and support towards the successful co...
Although participation in higher education (HE) has expanded in Europe, social inequalities remain a...
This article outlines three broad propositions for student equity in Australian higher education (HE...
Purpose: The massification of higher education is a definitive feature of the last fifty years. Wide...
Since the neoliberal reforms to British education in the 1980s, education debates have been saturate...
Since the neoliberal reforms to British education in the 1980s, education debates have been saturate...
Policies and programs to address higher education disadvantage reveal four distinct approaches, each...
This paper discusses the emergence of aspiration as a keyword linked to higher education equity poli...
The central contention of the article is that access to higher education (HE) may be increasingly be...
Both England and Australia have displayed strong social democratic traditions in their approaches to...
In 1998 education was declared ‘the best economic policy that we have’ (Department for Education and...
This paper discusses the emergence of aspiration as a keyword linked to higher education equity poli...
This article critically analyses national and institutional forms of policy and different conceptio...
This article provides a synoptic account of historically changing conceptions and practices of socia...
The interpretations and practices of widening participation are explored using a case study of an ac...
Widening participation has been a vehicle to facilitate access and support towards the successful co...
Although participation in higher education (HE) has expanded in Europe, social inequalities remain a...
This article outlines three broad propositions for student equity in Australian higher education (HE...
Purpose: The massification of higher education is a definitive feature of the last fifty years. Wide...
Since the neoliberal reforms to British education in the 1980s, education debates have been saturate...
Since the neoliberal reforms to British education in the 1980s, education debates have been saturate...
Policies and programs to address higher education disadvantage reveal four distinct approaches, each...
This paper discusses the emergence of aspiration as a keyword linked to higher education equity poli...
The central contention of the article is that access to higher education (HE) may be increasingly be...
Both England and Australia have displayed strong social democratic traditions in their approaches to...
In 1998 education was declared ‘the best economic policy that we have’ (Department for Education and...
This paper discusses the emergence of aspiration as a keyword linked to higher education equity poli...
This article critically analyses national and institutional forms of policy and different conceptio...
This article provides a synoptic account of historically changing conceptions and practices of socia...
The interpretations and practices of widening participation are explored using a case study of an ac...
Widening participation has been a vehicle to facilitate access and support towards the successful co...
Although participation in higher education (HE) has expanded in Europe, social inequalities remain a...
This article outlines three broad propositions for student equity in Australian higher education (HE...