Schools and emergency feeding in a national crisis in the United Kingdom: subterranean class strategies

IF 2.2 3区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH British Journal of Sociology of Education Pub Date : 2023-03-10 DOI:10.1080/01425692.2023.2187299
J. Preston
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Abstract

Abstract The role of ‘class strategies’ in policy formation is sometimes unseen as plans are unrealised in practice over long periods of historical time. ‘Subterranean class strategies’ are an extension of existing work on class to consider ‘class work’ on policy in the ‘long unenacted’. Using the example of emergency feeding in a national crisis, the stark difference in school meal planning for post-World War 2 emergencies when compared to the COVID-19 crisis is discussed. Through an analysis of archival records, it is shown that ‘subterranean class strategies’ - the devaluation of school catering expertise by the army and the private sector, the lack of co-operation of independent schools, and localisation and privatisation - diminished the role of schools in emergency feeding. The paper concludes by considering how the concept of  ‘subterranean class strategies’ could inform work on educational think tanks, privatisation and subsumption, and intersectional areas such as race.
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英国国家危机中的学校和紧急喂养:地下班级策略
摘要“阶级策略”在政策制定中的作用有时是看不见的,因为在很长一段历史时期内,计划在实践中没有实现。”“隐性课堂策略”是现有课堂工作的延伸,将“长期未执行”中的“课堂工作”视为政策。以国家危机中的紧急供餐为例,讨论了与新冠肺炎危机相比,第二次世界大战后紧急情况下学校膳食计划的明显差异。通过对档案记录的分析表明,“地下课堂策略”——军队和私营部门对学校餐饮专业知识的贬值、独立学校缺乏合作以及本地化和私有化——削弱了学校在紧急供餐中的作用。本文最后考虑了 ‘“地下阶级战略”可以为教育智库、私有化和包容以及种族等交叉领域的工作提供信息。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
9.50%
发文量
74
期刊介绍: British Journal of Sociology of Education is one of the most renowned international scholarly journals in the field. The journal publishes high quality original, theoretically informed analyses of the relationship between education and society, and has an outstanding record of addressing major global debates about the social significance and impact of educational policy, provision, processes and practice in many countries around the world. The journal engages with a diverse range of contemporary and emergent social theories along with a wide range of methodological approaches. Articles investigate the discursive politics of education, social stratification and mobility, the social dimensions of all aspects of pedagogy and the curriculum, and the experiences of all those involved, from the most privileged to the most disadvantaged. The vitality of the journal is sustained by its commitment to offer independent, critical evaluations of the ways in which education interfaces with local, national, regional and global developments, contexts and agendas in all phases of formal and informal education. Contributions are expected to take into account the wide international readership of British Journal of Sociology of Education, and exhibit knowledge of previously published articles in the field. Submissions should be well located within sociological theory, and should not only be rigorous and reflexive methodologically, but also offer original insights to educational problems and or perspectives.
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