Merry argues that most voluntary separation experiments in education are not driven by a sense of racial, cultural or religious superiority. Rather, they are driven among other things by a desire for quality education, not to mention community membership and self respect
In this article, Professor Garda explains how the separate but equal doctrine rejected in Brown be...
School segregation is both an enduring and growing area of research interest. School segregation is ...
Still Separate and Unequal: Segregation and the Future of Urban School Reform by Barry A. Gold, PhD,...
In this book I argue that school integration is not a proxy for educational justice. I demonstrate t...
This paper argues that self‐respect constitutes an important value, and further, an important basis ...
In this essay Michael Merry defends the following prima facie argument: that civic virtue is not dep...
Fifty years after Brown v. Board of Education, segregation based on race and sex is sweeping the nat...
There are several reasons to believe that social segregation is wrong. The value and weight given to...
In recent years, advocates for youth have begun to support voluntary school segregation as a solutio...
The article imports into the legal literature for the first time the full range of single sex educat...
The most coherent explanation of segregation is in terms of classed practices but not crudely as the...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to show that school segregation not only has an impac...
For a number of years in the Netherlands different strategies have been tried at both the national a...
In commenting on these rich papers by Michel Troper and Michael McConnell, I first analyze the impli...
The multicultural education movement of the last half century suggests that diversity and multicultu...
In this article, Professor Garda explains how the separate but equal doctrine rejected in Brown be...
School segregation is both an enduring and growing area of research interest. School segregation is ...
Still Separate and Unequal: Segregation and the Future of Urban School Reform by Barry A. Gold, PhD,...
In this book I argue that school integration is not a proxy for educational justice. I demonstrate t...
This paper argues that self‐respect constitutes an important value, and further, an important basis ...
In this essay Michael Merry defends the following prima facie argument: that civic virtue is not dep...
Fifty years after Brown v. Board of Education, segregation based on race and sex is sweeping the nat...
There are several reasons to believe that social segregation is wrong. The value and weight given to...
In recent years, advocates for youth have begun to support voluntary school segregation as a solutio...
The article imports into the legal literature for the first time the full range of single sex educat...
The most coherent explanation of segregation is in terms of classed practices but not crudely as the...
International audienceThe aim of this paper is to show that school segregation not only has an impac...
For a number of years in the Netherlands different strategies have been tried at both the national a...
In commenting on these rich papers by Michel Troper and Michael McConnell, I first analyze the impli...
The multicultural education movement of the last half century suggests that diversity and multicultu...
In this article, Professor Garda explains how the separate but equal doctrine rejected in Brown be...
School segregation is both an enduring and growing area of research interest. School segregation is ...
Still Separate and Unequal: Segregation and the Future of Urban School Reform by Barry A. Gold, PhD,...