Reviews
'A rich and multidimensional portrait of the historical and actual forces that govern the child in various corners of today's world.' - Kenneth Hultqvist, Stockholm Institute of Education 'Through their new understanding of the embedded systems of cultural reasoning governing the state, this intellectual tool may influence social and educational policy and practice for decades.' - Louis F. Miron, University of Illinois 'This collection performs important conceptual work by crossing and combining fields that are all too often kept apart: child studies, education, and social policy. Using a variety of disciplinary approaches, the authors show convincingly how policymakers in all of these domains use children as a wedge issue in efforts to reform families and restructure welfare states. By ranging across societies and over time, the articles map the impact of cross-cultural exchanges and trace the consolidation of global patterns of governance. Taken as a whole, the volume offers a fresh perspective on governmentality and the power/knowledge nexus; unique in its ambition, it has the potential to revise thinking in all of the fields it addresses.' - sonya Michel, Professor of American Studies and History, University of Maryland, author of Children's Interests / Mothers' Rights: The Shaping of America's Child Care Policy 'Editors and international colleagues, Bloch, Holmlund, Moqvist and Popkewitz present in this collection a rich smorgasbord of critical views of topics all too infrequently explored. Discourses, ideologies, research methodologies and theoretical perspectives are appropriately diverse in what amounts to a comprehensive reconceptualization of education's private-public realms. Central to all contributions are thematics and relations of governing and government, of care and welfare, of reason and knowledge, of freedom and control. This is exciting reading with something for everyone who seriously considers reform.' - Lynda Stone, Professor, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, "A rich and multidimensional portrait of the historical and actual forces that govern the child in various corners of today's world." --Kenneth Hultqvist, Stockholm Institute of Education "Through their new understanding of the embedded systems of cultural reasoning governing the state, this intellectual tool may influence social and educational policy and practice for decades." --Louis F. Miron, Educational Policy Studies, University of Illinois "This collection performs important conceptual work by crossing and combining fields that are all too often kept apart: child studies, education, and social policy. Using a variety of disciplinary approaches, the authors show convincingly how policymakers in all of these domains use children as a wedge issue in efforts to reform families and restructure welfare states. By ranging across societies and over time, the articles map the impact of cross-cultural exchanges and trace the consolidation of global patterns of governance. Taken as a whole, the volume offers a fresh perspective on governmentality and the power/knowledge nexus; unique in its ambition, it has the potential to revise thinking in all of the fields it addresses." --Sonya Michel, Professor of American Studies and History, University of Maryland, author of Children's Interests / Mothers' Rights: The Shaping of America's Child Care Policy "Editors and international colleagues, Bloch, Holmlund, Moqvist and Popkewitz present in this collection a rich smorgasbord of critical views of topics all too infrequently explored. Discourses, ideologies, research methodologies and theoretical perspectives are appropriately diverse in what amounts to a comprehensive reconceptualization of education's private-public realms. Central to all contributions are thematics and relations of governing and government, of care and welfare, of reason and knowledge, of freedom and control. This is exciting reading with something for everyone who seriously considers reform." -- Lynda Stone, Professor, Philosophy of Education, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill "This book is an important contribution to our understanding of the effects of globalization on welfare policies and the education of children in the early 2000s. It highlights both the main assumptions of today's discourses that travel and traverse nations and the immense variety in the way these are perceived and transcribed in different national contexts. Although there is a global child, it certainly has many faces. The book provides a rich and multidimensional portrait of the historical and actual forces that govern the child in various corners of today's world." -- Kenneth Hultqvist, Professor, Stockholm Institute of Education "This book offers conceptually powerful and historically grounded tools for scholars, policy analysts, and educators working in the broad arena of global studies in social welfare and education. Co-editors Bloch, Holmlund, Moqvist, and Popkewitz and their contributors provide sophisticated theoretical language and methodologies to aid in the understanding of the rapidly changing relations among knowledge/power and the state, both in its social as well as its 'non social' forms. Through their new understanding of hte embedded systems fo cultural reasoning governing the state, this intellectual tool may influence social and educational policy and practice for decades." -- Louis F. Miron, Professor of Educational Policy Studies, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Table of Content
PART I: GLOBAL AND LOCAL PATTERNS OF GOVERNING THE CHILD, THE FAMILY, THEIR CARE AND EDUCATION: AN INTRODUCTION; M.Bloch, T.Popkewitz, K.Holmlund & I.Moqvist PART II: THE UNIVERSAL CHILD AND FAMILY IN A GLOBAL SOCIETY: THE NATIONAL CONTEXT WITHIN THE GLOBAL CIRCULATION OF POWER RELATIONS The Ethics of Learning; G.Dahlberg The Welfare State and the Changed Meaning of Childhood; G.Hallden Constructing a Parent; I.Moqvist Children's Rights and the Protection of Childhood Under Changing Conditions in Russia; E.Smirnova & V.Sobkin PART III: HISTORIES AND HISTORIOGRAPHIES OF THE CHILD, FAMILY, CARE AND SCHOOLING Remaking the Home and 'Belonging': Changing Patterns of Governing the Child in the Family; T.S.Popkewitz Hear Ye! Hear Ye! The State, (Dis)ability, Education, and the Child; B.Baker The Child and the Spectacle of Policy in the Age of the 'Dangerous Individual'; C.Bailey Early Childhood Education: the Duty of the Family or Institutions?; L.Chalmel PART IV: YOUNG CHILD, GENDER AND CHANGING GOVERNING PATTERNS The State and Wage Earning Mothers: Ideology or Reality?; K.Holmlund Child Welfare in the United States: The Construction of Gendered, Oppositional Discourse(s); G.S.Cannella Children's Rights and Market Rights in the De-Welfared State; V.Polakow 'Teenage Parenthood is Bad for Parents and Children': A Feminist Critique of the Restructuring of the Governance of Family, Education and Social Welfare Policies and Practices; M.David PART V: GLOBALIZING NEW GOVERNING DISCOURSES IN SCHOOLING AS THE ADMINIDTRATION OF THE CHILD, FAMILY, AND EDUCATION Children and Families in Neocolonial Kenya: Losing Ground Under Neoliberal Global Policies; B.B.Swadener & P.Wachira Antiracism, IT, Education and the State in Sweden: Why here? Why now?; C.Hallgren & G.Weiner Educational Policy after Welfare: Reconstructing Patterns of Governance in Argentinean Education; I.Dussel The Global and the Local: A Feminist and Post-Colonial Analysis of the Restructured Governing Patterns Related to National Imaginaries of Care for Children and Families: Governing the Well-Educated and Cared for Citizen and Family in the USA, Senegal, and Hungary; M.Bloch