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From Public Schools to Privatization: Urban Teachers on the Front Lines [Kõva köide]

(Princeton University, USA)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 200 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 560 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Jan-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041132662
  • ISBN-13: 9781041132660
From Public Schools to Privatization: Urban Teachers on the Front Lines
  • Formaat: Hardback, 200 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 560 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Jan-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1041132662
  • ISBN-13: 9781041132660

From Public Schools to Privatization provides an in-depth and up-to-date critical analysis of the marketization and privatization of urban public schools in the United States. Drawing on critical race policy analysis and ethnographic methods, this book examines the gap between urban teachers’ daily experiences of marketization and the policy discourses of politicians, policymakers, and reformers used to rationalize market policies. Tracing the arc of marketization from the rise of neoliberal market-based education policies in the 1980s to the present, the book also situates ethnographic vignettes of teachers’ work lives and teacher testimonies in their historical, political, and economic context to show how broader racialized political economic forces have shaped teachers’ work. Ultimately, this book argues that both major political parties in the United States have embraced marketization and that, in the current moment, we are experiencing an effort to dismantle public education entirely through privatization. Nevertheless, the author suggests that there is hope in the resistance of urban teachers, social justice unionism, and the promise of organizing a broad multiracial, pro-democracy, pro-worker social movement.



From Public Schools to Privatization provides an in-depth and up-to-date critical analysis of the marketization and privatization of urban public schools in the United States.

Arvustused

Some books arrive at just the right time. In From Public Schools to Privatization, Kathleen Nolan traces the decades-long racial-capitalist project of neoliberal restructuring of U.S. public education through to the current crisis: Project 2025's white Christian nationalist authoritarian marketization agenda of full privatization and anti-woke ideology. Nolans rich ethnographic data vividly demonstrate the cumulatively destructive impact of this trajectory on urban teaching, but also the rise of teachers and teacher union locals for racial justice and strong urban schools.

Pauline Lipman, Professor of Educational Policy Studies, University of Illinois, USA

In From Public Schools to Privatization, Dr. Kathleen Nolan offers a sweeping and poignant analysis of the changes in teachers labor over the last three decades. Through interviews with teachers, this book critically examines how rise of neoliberal education policies and conservative nationalism have resulted in an all-out conservative attack on public education, while also showing us the hope that individual teachers and the collective power of teachers unions can give us.

Wayne Au, Dean and Professor, School of Educational Studies, University of Washington Bothell, USA

Nolans From Public Schools to Privatization is a masterful study from an educator and researcher who has both lived the deleterious impact of what she calls public school marketization and rigorously studied its consequences. Nolans meticulous work shows how decades of bipartisan corporate education reform paved the way for todays extremist efforts to ban antiracist teaching and dismantle public education through privatization. Yet Nolan also highlights how teachers resistthrough everyday refusals, culturally sustaining pedagogy, solidarity with immigrant and BIPOC students, and social justice unionismdemonstrating that even under the harshest conditions, educators continue to nurture democratic possibilities. At once searing in its critique and hopeful in its vision, this book illuminates both the devastating costs of market-driven reform and the bold acts of resistance that point toward a more just future for public education.

Jesse Hagopian, award winning educator, author, co-editor of Rethinking Schools, and a founding member of Black Lives Matter at School

1. Worked to Death: The Disappearing Urban Public School Teacher
2.
Marketization and Teachers Work: From ANAR to the Present
3. Obama Era Urban
School Turnaround: Incoherence and the Making of the Resistant Teacher
4. The
Evolution of the Neoliberal Marketization of Urban Education
5. The Rise of
Authoritarian Marketization
6. Teachers Unions: The Challenges
7.
Reflections on the Death and Rise of the Urban Public School Teacher
Kathleen Nolan is a lecturer and the assistant director of English language arts in the Program in Teacher Preparation at Princeton University.