This dissertation draws on published memoirs, autobiographies, biographies and other sources to explore the higher educational experiences of people who served in UK cabinets and shadow cabinets between 1964 and 2015 and some of their contemporaries. It applies and seeks to contribute to thinking on elite formation associated with Pierre Bourdieu - in particular his work on habitus and capital. It further seeks to explain why graduates of Oxford and Cambridge were so heavily represented at senior levels in the field of parliamentary politics throughout this period, comprising 54% of the political elite and 62% of its graduate population. The thesis argues that Bourdieu’s analytical framework provides as useful and valid a means of analys...
Written as part of a doctoral thesis exploring young people’s educational decision making, this arti...
Bourdieu’s construct of the field of power has received relatively little attention despite its nove...
This thesis develops a class-biographical analysis of ‘widening participation’ students’ transitions...
This study examines the proposition that mass higher education is, in practice, less a network of mo...
This article examines student accounts of credentials, talent and academic success, against a backdr...
Bourdieu argues that political inclination is dependent upon one's position in the academic field, a...
The purpose of this paper is to revisit my ‘naïve’ experience of Cambridge in the 1960s in the light...
<p>The United States experienced a tremendous expansion of higher education after the Second World W...
I argue for the continuing relevance of the Bourdieusian theoretical schema to research related to h...
This paper explores the significance of an elite higher education for occupational differentiation w...
This article makes the case for applying Bourdieu’s sociological approach and research tools to the ...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the debate over Britain’s application for membership of the...
The under-representation in higher education of those from less privileged social backgrounds is an ...
Working-class adult learning was a significant feature of political agitation, industrial religion, ...
Written as part of a doctoral thesis exploring young people’s educational decision making, this arti...
Bourdieu’s construct of the field of power has received relatively little attention despite its nove...
This thesis develops a class-biographical analysis of ‘widening participation’ students’ transitions...
This study examines the proposition that mass higher education is, in practice, less a network of mo...
This article examines student accounts of credentials, talent and academic success, against a backdr...
Bourdieu argues that political inclination is dependent upon one's position in the academic field, a...
The purpose of this paper is to revisit my ‘naïve’ experience of Cambridge in the 1960s in the light...
<p>The United States experienced a tremendous expansion of higher education after the Second World W...
I argue for the continuing relevance of the Bourdieusian theoretical schema to research related to h...
This paper explores the significance of an elite higher education for occupational differentiation w...
This article makes the case for applying Bourdieu’s sociological approach and research tools to the ...
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the debate over Britain’s application for membership of the...
The under-representation in higher education of those from less privileged social backgrounds is an ...
Working-class adult learning was a significant feature of political agitation, industrial religion, ...
Written as part of a doctoral thesis exploring young people’s educational decision making, this arti...
Bourdieu’s construct of the field of power has received relatively little attention despite its nove...
This thesis develops a class-biographical analysis of ‘widening participation’ students’ transitions...