Abstract
In this brief essay, I outline a core concern of educational policy research that often is left unattended – the hidden benefits of policy. I then share a host of studies that have taken a critical stance toward policy research, strategically engaging the masked, unacknowledged, and latent ideological consequences of policy texts. These studies help illustrate ways that educational policy has become a normative social practice for securing the status-quo and perpetuating dominant ideological discourses. I conclude by offering thoughts toward a reconfiguration of policy that encourages a compassionate, reflexive, living interrogation of how discourse begets material reality.
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CITATION STYLE
Gildersleeve, R. (2018). Policy, Reconfigured: Critical Policy Studies And The (False) Beneficence Of Subjects. Journal of Critical Thought and Praxis, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.31274/jctp-180810-8
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