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‘Grit’, Governmentality & the Erasure of

Inequality?

The Curious Rise of Character Education Policy

A BSA Sociology of Education Study Group One-Day Conference

in association with Culture, Media and Creative Industries, King’s College
London and the School of Sociology and Social Policy, University of Leeds


Monday 11 July 2016,

King’s College London


Call for Papers


Over the past five years, there has been a growing interest and investment
in ‘character’ education. A growing number of policy initiatives and
reports have asserted the importance of nurturing character in children and
young people – with qualities such as ‘grit’, ‘optimism’, ‘resilience’,
‘zest’, and ‘bouncebackability’ located as preparing young people for the
challenges of the 21st century and enabling social mobility. This includes
the Department for Education’s multi-million pound package of measures to
help schools ‘instil character in pupils’ and the ‘All Party Parliamentary
Group on Social Mobility’ *Character and Resilience Manifesto*. The
positioning of character education as a panacea to social and educational
inequality has coincided with policies promoting ‘resilience’ in areas as
diverse as health and housing to employment and welfare. It is notable that
the policy traction of these terms has emerged against a backdrop of
austerity in which programmes of welfare reform and continuing economic
uncertainty have seen rising poverty levels among children and young
people, and in which political rhetoric has explained poverty as resulting
from behavioral and moral deficiencies rather than the structural
inequalities unleashed by neoliberal capitalism*.*


This one-day conference organized by Dr Anna Bull and Dr Kim Allen will
bring together researchers to critically discuss this policy agenda. It
will attempt to unravel how and why it has emerged and at this particular
moment, and consider its implications. The day is designed to enable a
critical, participatory and collective dialogue with a series of plenary
panels and break-out discussion groups. Invited speakers include: *Dr Janet
Batsleer* (Principal Lecturer in Youth and Community Work; Manchester
Metropolitan University) and *Professor Val Gillies* (Visiting Professor,
Sociology, Goldsmiths).


We invite proposals for short papers of up to 15 minutes on themes
including but not restricted to:


Character education and social class

Music, sports and arts education

Military education and character

Religion, spirituality and character virtues

Policy actors/ policy ‘evidence’/ genealogies of character education

Character education, early years intervention and the ‘troubled families’
programme

Survivalist cultural narratives: resilience and character in the cultural
sphere

‘Knightly virtues’: gender and character education


We welcome papers from researchers from across the career stage and located
in a diverse range of fields including Sociology, Education, Social Policy,
Youth Studies and Youth Work; Cultural Studies; History; Politics; Classics
and Philosophy.


Deadline for abstracts *Friday 15**th** April 2016*. Please send your
abstracts (up to 250 words with your email and institutional affiliation)
to: *[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]> Please direct enquiries to
Anna Bull (*[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]>) or Kim Allen (
*[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]> ) There will be a small
registration fee for attendance (Reduced rate for BSA members).
Registration will open at the end of April.


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