The global rise of a neoliberal ‘new politics of parenting’ discursively constructs parents in poverty as the reason for, and remedy to, child poverty. This allows for Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) to become a key policy lever by using human technologies to intervene in and regulate the lives of parents and children in poverty. The article explores the uptake of this policy locally through interviews with 30 ECEC practitioners in three locations across England. The interviews suggested that the neoliberal discursive formation of child poverty as a problem of the poor themselves had symbolic power and was a view shared by most of the interviewees. This appeared to restrict their thinking and action, shaping a limited engagement w...
There’s a lot of talk in early childhood education and care today about ‘outcomes’ and ‘quality’, ‘t...
The introduction to this article will seek to present a distillation of Sally Lubeck's achievements ...
Popular and political discussions in the UK about children’s future prospects are currently dominate...
The global rise of a neoliberal ‘new politics of parenting’ discursively constructs parents in pover...
The global rise of a neoliberal ‘new politics of parenting’ discursively constructs parents in pover...
Purpose Several ideas exist about social justice and how inequalities can be tackled to help famili...
The project aim and the objectives below were met in full. The research aimed to offer an argument i...
Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) has been constructed as a new site for educational, socioc...
This vital book provides an accessible analysis of the role played by neo-liberalism in the reshapin...
Current national and international economic policies are exerting ever more direct pressures on chil...
Living in poverty disadvantages young children reducing school readiness. ‘Pedagogy of listening’ ca...
The Covid-19 pandemic has created an opportunity to examine the initial policies developed by Austra...
Poverty in early childhood is pervasive, effecting every aspect of children’s lives. Under current g...
Living in poverty disadvantages young children reducing school readiness. ‘Pedagogy of listening’ ca...
This paper considers the socially progressive function of a model of 'quality' early childhood educa...
There’s a lot of talk in early childhood education and care today about ‘outcomes’ and ‘quality’, ‘t...
The introduction to this article will seek to present a distillation of Sally Lubeck's achievements ...
Popular and political discussions in the UK about children’s future prospects are currently dominate...
The global rise of a neoliberal ‘new politics of parenting’ discursively constructs parents in pover...
The global rise of a neoliberal ‘new politics of parenting’ discursively constructs parents in pover...
Purpose Several ideas exist about social justice and how inequalities can be tackled to help famili...
The project aim and the objectives below were met in full. The research aimed to offer an argument i...
Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) has been constructed as a new site for educational, socioc...
This vital book provides an accessible analysis of the role played by neo-liberalism in the reshapin...
Current national and international economic policies are exerting ever more direct pressures on chil...
Living in poverty disadvantages young children reducing school readiness. ‘Pedagogy of listening’ ca...
The Covid-19 pandemic has created an opportunity to examine the initial policies developed by Austra...
Poverty in early childhood is pervasive, effecting every aspect of children’s lives. Under current g...
Living in poverty disadvantages young children reducing school readiness. ‘Pedagogy of listening’ ca...
This paper considers the socially progressive function of a model of 'quality' early childhood educa...
There’s a lot of talk in early childhood education and care today about ‘outcomes’ and ‘quality’, ‘t...
The introduction to this article will seek to present a distillation of Sally Lubeck's achievements ...
Popular and political discussions in the UK about children’s future prospects are currently dominate...