机会囤积与精英复制:种族隔离后南非的学校隔离

IF 3.3 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY Social Forces Pub Date : 2024-04-30 DOI:10.1093/sf/soae070
Rob J Gruijters, Benjamin Elbers, Vijay Reddy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

学校一体化是当代南非机会平等和种族和解的一个重要指标。尽管它在公共和政治言论中占据重要地位,但却没有系统的证据表明学校隔离的程度和模式。借鉴种族隔离后政治解决的相关文献以及机会囤积的社会学理论,我们解释了在 1994 年废除法律上的种族隔离后,少数白人以及在较小程度上的新兴黑人中产阶级是如何垄断南非最负盛名的学校的。利用 2021 年年度学校调查(涵盖南非所有学校的行政数据集)和 2019 年国际数学与科学研究趋势学校调查,我们发现学校在种族和社会经济方面的隔离程度非常高。白人学生几乎都在以前的白人学校就读,很少接触到低收入的黑人多数群体,而在公立和私立精英学校就读的白人学生人数却远远超过了白人。我们认为,在南非和其他教育系统资源不足的情况下,精英占据少数成绩优秀的学校,是种族和阶级特权的再现。
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Opportunity Hoarding and Elite Reproduction: School Segregation in Post-Apartheid South Africa
School integration is an important indicator of equality of opportunity and racial reconciliation in contemporary South Africa. Despite its prominence in public and political discourse, however, there is no systemic evidence on the levels and patterns of school segregation. Drawing on the literature on the post-apartheid political settlement and sociological theories of opportunity hoarding, we explain how the small White minority and, to a lesser extent, the new Black middle class monopolized access to South Africa’s most prestigious schools following the abolition of de jure segregation in 1994. Using the 2021 Annual School Survey—an administrative dataset covering all South African schools—and the 2019 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study school survey, we find very high levels of school segregation along racial as well as socioeconomic lines. White students almost exclusively attend former White schools, have little exposure to the low-income Black majority, and are vastly overrepresented in elite public and private schools. We argue that in South Africa and other contexts with under-resourced education systems, elite capture of the few high-performing schools serves to reproduce race and class privilege.
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来源期刊
Social Forces
Social Forces SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
123
期刊介绍: Established in 1922, Social Forces is recognized as a global leader among social research journals. Social Forces publishes articles of interest to a general social science audience and emphasizes cutting-edge sociological inquiry as well as explores realms the discipline shares with psychology, anthropology, political science, history, and economics. Social Forces is published by Oxford University Press in partnership with the Department of Sociology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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