'A rare mix of prescient analysis, unflinching challenge, and practical solutions, Schooling Misogyny shows how schooling is an enabling environment for pervasive and rising misogyny and is simultaneously the best hope we have to confront it. Urgent, powerful, and an essential call to action: this is the book every educator needs right now.'
Professor Cynthia Miller-Idriss, School of Public Affairs and School of Education, American University, USA
Few academic texts manage the balance between readability, robust research and real-world remedies with the deftness of Schooling Misogyny. This book will be an essential tool for all educators hoping to tackle the dangers of structural misogyny in schools. Ultimately, Schooling Misogynys greatest benefits will be for all the students who depend on their schools to keep them safe, help them learn, and teach them how to build a better world for everyone.
Jane Gilmore, award winning author of best selling books Fixed It: Violence and the representation of women in the media, and It takes a village to teach your children about consent
This excellent and urgently needed book addresses the growing influence of online male supremacism in schools today. Crucially, it avoids positing the manosphere as a problem that can be rooted out of an otherwise functional education system. On the contrary, it situates the impact of and responses to digital misogyny as continuous with a long and deep-rooted history of institutional misogyny in schools, demonstrating why and how successfully tackling this issue requires self-critique, honesty and long-term, whole-school approaches. Schooling Misogynys key message, that unlearning misogyny benefits everyone in education, is a powerful call to action, and will resonate far beyond the Australian context.
Professor Debbie Ging, Institute for Research on Genders and Sexualities, Dublin City University, Ireland
'Amid growing concern about the influence of the manosphere in education settings, Schooling Misogyny is a timely contribution. Empirically grounded and practically focused, the book offers compelling accounts of the persistence and escalation of sexism and misogyny in Australian classrooms. It builds on this evidence to provide guidance for schools and policymakers seeking to foster more gender-respectful schooling environments. It is an important read for educators, leaders, and policymakers committed to preventing gender-based violence through education.'
Professor Amanda Keddie, School of Education, Deakin University, Australia