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Private encroachment through crisis-making : the privatization of education for refugees

[Abstract] 
Type Article
ISSN 10682341
information source ERIC
Author Le, Hang M. College Park, University of Maryland, United States.
Pages 23 p.
General Note Peer reviewed
Source Education Policy Analysis Archives. Vol. 27, no. 126 Special issue, October 2019
Publisher Tampa: Colleges of Education at Arizona State University and the University of South Florida، 2019
Publisher address USF EDU162, 4202 East Fowler Avenue. Tampa, FL 33620-5650. United States. Colleges of Education at Arizona State University and the University of South Florida. T: 0018139743400. F: 0018139743826. http://epaa.asu.edu.
ERIC document no. EJ1232115
Electronic Location Full text (PDF)  PDF
Descriptors Crisis Management  -  Privatization  -  Refugees  -  Private sector  -  Educational innovations  -  Public sector  -  Government role  -  Educational policies  -  Social values  -  Children  -  Adolescents  -  Access to education  -  Educational finances  -  Lower secondary education  -  Partnerships in education  -  Social problems  -  International organizations  -  Syria  -  Lebanon  -  Jordan
Language of document English
Country United States
How has education for refugees been shaped by broader dynamics of educational privatization? This paper argues that the invoking of the 'refugee crisis' narrative has been a crucial force in facilitating the privatization of this sector. The urgency of crisis helps to naturalize private actors' participation in refugees' education as equal partners to host governments, multilateral agencies, and civil society. Consistent with Stephen Ball's (2012) distinction between privatization in and of education, the privatization of refugee education also advances through two dimensions: the creation of a new space -- a new 'market' -- for private actors, and the infusion of market and business principles such as 'innovation' into all aspects of education. The crisis narrative has created a new 'horizon of taken-for-granted' (Hall, 1993), where it is simply natural that private actors must participate in the assumption of the traditional responsibilities of the state in providing education for refugees. (As Provided)

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Le, Hang M.. (2019). Private encroachment through crisis-making : the privatization of education for refugees. Education Policy Analysis Archives. Vol. 27, no. 126 Special issue, October 2019. 23 p. Retrieved from search.shamaa.org