Synopses & Reviews
Throughout Western history, education has been brought to larger shares of the population for longer periods of their lives. With the development of nation-states, education has become a social right, a basis for democratic self-determination, and a means of providing wealth and social security. And yet, in the US since the 1980s, the effect of education on economic growth began to decrease, and social inequality eventually increased after decades of growing equality.
Has the rise of the education state reached its limits? This book argues that the ascent and descent of public interest in education policy - as seen by waning front-page coverage of education in leading American, British, French, and German newspapers - is connected to the rise and fall of states in the transformation from Western to non-Western globalization and that the prospects are further internationalization or Hellenism.
Synopsis
Education policy is a core element of the state's sovereignty and autonomy. This book analyzes the rise of the western education state and its limits in times of transition from western to non-western globalization and of waning newspaper interest in France, Germany, the UK and the US.
About the Author
Ansgar Weymann is Professor of Sociology at the University of Bremen, Germany. He has previously published Transformation of Education Policy (co-edited).
Table of Contents
1. Introduction2. Political Power, the Economy, and Integration3. Founding Ideas of Education Policy4. The Ascent of the Education State in Europe5. Growth and Stagflation in the Human Capital Century6. Front-Page Coverage in the Twentieth Century7. Victorious Nations and Empires - 1900 to 19108. Welfare States: Education as a Cure-All - 1950 to 20079. Ascents and Descents10. Towards Internationalization and Hellenism