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1、international studies in sociology of education, volume 15, number 3, 2005page 257globalisation and its educationaldiscontents: neoliberalisation and itsimpacts on education workers rights,pay and conditionsdave hilluniversity of northampton, united kingdomabstract this article examines some impacts

2、 of neoliberal educationpolicies during the current period of the intensification of neoliberal capital.section 1 examines the relationship between education and capital, identifyingthree plans capital has in relation to education. it sets out some of the majoraspects of neoliberal policy developmen

3、ts in schooling and further education.section 2 describes, analyses and evaluates the research methodology used indeveloping this article, locating the methodology within the debate betweenmethodological purists on the one hand, and committed research on theother. the research for this article, with

4、in the research for social justiceparadigm, is rationalised. section 3 examines the impacts of neoliberalisationon education workers securities their pay/ salaries, conditions of employment,stresses and pressures at work, and their work identity and status. it alsoexamines the impacts on the rights

5、and powers of education trade unions. thearticle ends, in section 4, by briefly calling for resistance to the global neoliberalcapitalist agenda in schooling and education.introductionconstant revolutionizing of production, uninterrupted disturbance of allsocial conditions, everlasting uncertainty a

6、nd agitation distinguish thebourgeois epoch from all earlier ones. all fixed, fast-frozen relations .are swept away, all new-formed ones become antiquated before they canossify. (marx & engels (1977 1847, p. 38)this article analyses some of the impacts of the neoliberalisation of schoolingand fu

7、rther education on teaching and learning in current changing times ofthe intensification of neoliberal capitalism and the current revolutionisationof production.1section 1 examines the relationship between education and capital,identifying three plans capital has in relation to education, and sets o

8、ut someof the major aspects of neoliberal policy in schooling and further education.section 2 describes, analyses and evaluates the research methodologyused in developing this article, locating the methodology within the debatedave hill258between methodological purists on the one hand, and committed

9、 researchon the other. the research for this article, within the research for socialjustice paradigm, is rationalised.section 3 examines the impacts of neoliberalisation on educationworkers securities their pay/ salaries, conditions of employment, stressesand pressures at work, and their work identi

10、ty and status. it also examinesthe impacts on the rights and powers of education trade unions. there areother major impacts of neoliberal education policies globally. these include,first, the increasing inequalities within and between countries, second, thediminution and bypassing of democratic loca

11、l and national control overeducation, and third, the reconceptualisation of the very concept ofdemocracy together with the commodification of humanity.2the article ends, in section 4, by briefly calling for resistance to theglobal neoliberal capitalist agenda in schooling and education.1. impacts of

12、 neoliberalisation of schoolingneoliberal capital, schooling and further educationthe fundamental principle of capitalism is the sanctification of private(individual or corporate) profit, based on the extraction of surplus labour(unpaid labour-time) as surplus value from the labour-power of workers.

13、 it isa creed and practice of (racialised and gendered) class exploitation,exploitation by the capitalist class of those who provide the profits throughtheir labour, the national and international working class.3there have been a number of changes in capitalism in this currentperiod of neoliberal gl

14、obalisation. one development is the growth in service,communications and technological industries in the developed world. oneservice industry is education. as the international chamber of commerce(icc) observes, services are coming to dominate the economic activities ofcountries at virtually every s

15、tage of development (icc, 1999, p. 1). theicc then draws the conclusion a contested conclusion that this makesservices trade liberalization a necessity for the integration of the worldeconomy (1999, p. 1).another development is the declining profitability of capital the crisisof capital accumulation

16、. this crisis has resulted in intensification ofcompetition between capitals, between national and between transnationalcapitals and corporations. there is general agreement among marxists thatthe pressure on nations to liberalize services at the national level can be seen,therefore, as a response t

17、o the declining profitability of manufacture(beckmann & cooper, 2004).globalisation is not a qualitatively new phenomenon but a tendencywhich has always been integral to capitalisms growth. within the marxistparadigm there is growing recognition of the relevance of marxs accountexpressed in the

18、communist manifesto that globalisation is the predictableglobalisation and its educational discontents259outcome of capitalisms expansionary tendencies, evident since its emergenceas a viable form of society (cole, 1998, 2005; bromley, 1999).this crisis of capital accumulation, as predicted by marx

19、& engels(1977 1847), has led to the intensification of the extraction of surplusvalue, the progressing global immiseration of workers, and the intensificationof control of populations by the ideological and repressive state apparatusesidentified and analysed by althusser (althusser, 1971; see al

20、so hill, 1989,2001, 2005a).national and global aspects of neoliberalism in educationthe major aspects of neoliberal education policies include the following:deregulation and decentralisation; the importation of new publicmanagerialism into the management of schools and colleges and educationservices

21、; a fiscal regime of cuts in publicly funded schooling and furthereducation services; commercialisation of and within schools; the charging offees; outsourcing of services to privately owned companies; and theprivatisation and ownership of schools and colleges by private corporations.national and in

22、ternational legal frameworks are developing to ensureinternational accessibility to the privatised market in educational services.one salient policy is employment policy: attacks on and downwards pressureson workers rights and conditions, and on trade union rights.proponents of liberalisation claim

23、that private is better than public,that competition improves standards, that privatisation and otherliberalising policies and processes nationally and globally (such as free trade)improve productivity and efficiency. to take one example of such claims, theworld bank, one of the main global levers fo

24、r privatisation, has proclaimed:the virtues of the private sector, especially compared to the publicsystem, include: (a) internal efficiency and management almost nowaste, lean organizational chart, better decision-making flow, lessdiscontinuity of administration, agility in crisis solution, betters

25、tudents/teacher and students/staff ratio; (b) flexibility to hire/fireteachers, determine their salaries according to market values and costlevels; and (c) flexibility to adapt quicker to labor market needs and thuschange curricula . private institutions are often accused of getting excessprofits an

26、d paying inadequate attention to quality . although, claims theworld bank, there has never been a systematic demonstration of theirexistence. (world bank, 1991, p. 69)4three education plans of capitalcapital has a number of plans with respect to education.5the capitalist plan for education. a first

27、plan of capital is to produce andreproduce a work force and citizenry and set of consumers fit for capital.dave hill260this has two functions, an ideological function and a labour-trainingfunction. these comprise socially producing labour-power for capitalistenterprises. this is peoples capacity to

28、labour their skills and attitudes,together with their ideological compliance and suitability for capital asworkers, citizens and consumers. this is the capitalist plan for education.6the capitalist plan in education. a second plan of capital is to smooth the wayfor direct profit-taking/profiteering

29、from education. it is about how capitalwants to make direct profits from education.this centres on setting business free in education for profit-makingand profit-taking by capital, extracting profits from privatelycontrolled/owned schools and colleges or aspects of their functioning.common mechanism

30、s are, for example, from managing, advising, controllingand owning them. so, in some countries, core teaching services areprivatised the school/college itself becomes privately owned. or itsperipheral services are privatised both within institutions (services such ascatering, security, reprographics

31、) and nationally. examples are student feesor loans for staying on at school in england, or for attending communitycolleges in the united states, being run by private corporations rather thanby the local or national state.privatisation of schools, the growth of the private sector in schoolingand fur

32、ther education, and the setting up of nationally-owned or foreignownedor franchised chains of schools is happening in a number of countries.the growth of this private sector is occurring in developed states. it isoccurring on a larger scale in developing and less-developed states, forced onoften unw

33、illing governments by the restructuring demands made bymultinational banking and finance agencies, such as the world bank and theinternational finance corporation.capitals global plan for education corporations. this is the third plan of capital,and is a series of national capitalist plans for domes

34、tically based national ormultinational corporations globally. it is a plan for edubusinesses andcorporations based in britain, the united states, australia and new zealand,as well as those based locally (e.g. in particular states such as brazil in latinamerica) to profit from international privatisi

35、ng, franchising and marketingactivities.7 with a worldwide education industry valued at $2 trillionannually (unesco, 2000, p.16), it is not surprising that many investorsand “edupreneurs” are anxious to seize the opportunities to access thisuntapped gold mine (shugarensky & davidson-harden, 2003

36、, p. 323).it is not just national edubusinesses that are involved it is large multiactivity national and global capitalist companies (mahoney et al, 2003;rikowski, 2005).with respect to the united kingdom, richard hatcher comments thatas the export value of manufacturing, farming and some service in

37、dustriesdeclines, the governments policy is that britain should become a marketglobalisation and its educational discontents261leader in exporting a new international business: privatised services. hatchersuggests that the british governments intention may be to foster andpromote the private educati

38、on industry until it is strong enough to competeinternationally. he further suggests that the attempt to develop a world classeducation system is not for the benefit of our children but to maintainbusinesses in the future (hatcher, 2001).relationship between these three plans of capitalwhat are the

39、primary aims of capital regarding education to make directprofits, whether nationally or globally, or to secure an appropriateworkforce? in hatchers view, the education business sector, even though itis growing, is a tiny part of the british, or any other, economy. he suggeststhat currently the over

40、riding interest of the vast majority of employers,including the big bourgeoisie, is in the production of human capital, not theprofitability of the edubusiness sector. he comments:the crucial question is do they rely on the state to deliver that futureworkforce itself, directly, through the public s

41、chool system (suitablyadvised and pressured by the business lobby, of course, and with ahealthy dose of input by for-profit companies), or have they lostconfidence in the states ability to deliver, to the point where they want tosee public education handed over to the private sector to run (with all

42、 thevery risky political as well as technical problems that would raise)? in myview there is no evidence to support this latter view whereas there isplenty to support the former. (hatcher, 2005b; see also hatcher, 2005a)however, it would appear from an examination of existing trends globallythat the

43、 relative importance of direct profit-taking by capital could wellbecome of far more significance than currently. current worldwide spendingin education is estimated at around 2,000 billion dollars . more than globalautomotive sales (santos, 2004, p. 17). according to santos, capital growthin educat

44、ion has been exponential, showing one of the highest earning ratesof the market: £1000 invested in 1996 generated £3405 four years later(santos, 2004, pp. 17-18, cited in delgado-ramos and saxe-fernandez,2005). santos continues, that is an increased value of 240%, while thelondon stock exc

45、hange valorization rate accounted on the same period for65%. other 2004 data indicate that, current commercialised education,incomplete as it is, already generates around $365 billion in profitsworldwide (2004, pp. 17-18).neoliberalisation of education: global similarities, national variationswhiche

46、ver aim, and policy, become salient, or increase in importance andimpact, varies to from country to country. there are global similarities inliberalising education policy. there are, however, local variations in the typeand extent of the various policies. these relate to different historicaldave hil

47、l262conditions and balance of forces the relative strengths of the trade unionmovement, workers trade union and political organisations on the one hand(with their varying strengths of resistance to neoliberal policies), and those oflocal or transnational capital on the other. we are not in an era of

48、 theunimpeded march to neoliberal capitalism. a comparison of three northamerican states (canada, the united states and mexico), for example,shows some similarities and some differences in context and policy.pardíñaz-solís (1997) points out the impact of the different histories ofthe

49、three states of north america in particular the corporatist history of thestate and education policy in mexico, which, unlike the usa, has statemandatedtextbooks and a national curriculum (with some variation betweenthe regions of mexico). however, he also draws attention to the similaritiesbetween

50、policies in the three states, and suggests that, despite very differenthistories and state ideologies in the past, neoliberal trends in policy arecontinuing apace in mexico. hursh (2005) similarly examines differencesand similarities between the neoliberal education agenda in england andwales and th

51、e united states.privatisation. privatisation takes many forms, different forms sometimes indifferent countries. in britain, the centre for public servicess booklet of2003, mortgaging our childrens future (hall, 2003), analyses the variouspolicies and initiatives under way in secondary schools in eng

52、land and wales(see also rikowski, 2005; hill, 2006c). hall discusses making markets, cityacademies and specialist schools, school companies, the excellence in citiesprogramme, privatising local education authorities, the private financeinitiative (pfi), outsourcing/restructuring of school meals and

53、the educationaction zones policy.these are seen by rikowski as means of softening up the educationservice to business control and various forms of profit-making by capital.rikowski goes further, and suggests that any degree of privatisation andprivate involvement acts as a profit virus that once a p

54、ublic service such aseducation is infected (virused) by private company involvement, then it willinevitably become liable to the regulations of the general agreement fortrade in services (gats), and open up to free trade in services by nationaland by multinational and foreign capital (rikowski, 2003

55、, 2005; see also hill,2005b).in britain there is currently what may be seen as the hidden preprivatisation of state schools in england by enabling schools to function aslittle businesses through increased autonomies and business-likemanagements and corporate aspects, and the ability, within the 2002

56、education act and the october 2005 white paper, higher standards, betterschools for all: more choice for parents and pupils (her majestys government,2005) for schools to act as capitalist enterprises in terms of their ability tomerge and engage in takeovers of other schools (rikowski, 2005a,b). scho

57、olsglobalisation and its educational discontents263can enter into deals with private-sector outfits. they can also sell educationalservices to other schools.in a number of states, such as pakistan, governments simply requestprivate companies to fill the gap of non-provision publicly built andstaffed/equipped schooling. private schools have mushroomed at all levels,from pre-school to postgraduate studies. there are an estimated 56,000private institutions currently operating in pakistan, providing educa

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