School Choice, Race and Social Anxiety

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A01=Anthony E. Healy
Attendance Sector
Author_Anthony E. Healy
Banlieue Rouge
Category=JBF
Category=JBSA
Category=JBSL
Category=JHBK
Category=JNAM
Category=JNF
Category=JNU
Color Blind Ideology
Diverse Suburban Schools
educational inequality
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
French Middle Class
French Parents
French urban school segregation
Global Risk
Group Threat
Group Threat Theory
immigrant integration
Lower Town
Macron
Middle Class Parents
Parental Accounts
parental decision making
Parental Networks
Paris Region
Paris Suburbs
Public Middle School
qualitative policy analysis
Racial Project
RER
School Choice
Social Anxiety
sociology of education
teacher distribution
United States
Upper Town
Van Zanten
White Havens

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032116143
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Based on a carefully contextualized and critical study, this book tells how France’s dominant social and political ideology and prevailing cultural conventions abate the effects of race and anxiety within school choice, here focused on public-school middle-class parents living among immigrants in the diverse Paris suburbs.

The study employs innovative techniques to tackle the presence of race, a difficult topic in France, and to address the impact of global risk from which social anxiety springs. Interviews for this book took place when a wave of deadly terrorism, mass migration of refugees, and the divisiveness of a presidential election made topics around the study poignant. It demonstrates how race operates in French education policy and practices by directing attention to how experienced and more qualified teachers move over their careers to less diverse schools, seen by teachers as having better students.

The book explores how social anxiety created through global risk is culturally resisted within the French context by viewing this resistance theoretically through parental dispositions. It presents the racist perception in French school choice by revealing the education policies and parental choices that often segregate immigrants into schools with inexperienced and unqualified teachers. This book will be of interest to academics at upper-level undergraduate as well as graduate courses, policymakers, educators who are interested in inequality, sociology of education, transnational and critical perspectives on race, schooling, and school choice.

Anthony E. Healy is visiting assistant professor at Emory University in Atlanta. A former journalist and consultant, he is author of a non-academic book, The Postindustrial Promise. The author’s research interests lie in the juncture of families, education, and inequality.

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