L’architecte au service du politique ? Construction scolaire, politique et idéologie en Angleterre du New Labour à la Coalition (1997-2012)

From 1997 to 2010 sustained investment in school building was observed in England, under successive Labour governments committed to the renewal of public services and to the promotion of education as a national priority. School architecture was thus made to support po...

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Main Author: Françoise Granoulhac
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines 2013-11-01
Series:Revue LISA
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/5386
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spelling doaj-56cabb9907b94480803d7628f6574f052021-10-02T01:21:12ZengMaison de la Recherche en Sciences HumainesRevue LISA1762-61532013-11-01L’architecte au service du politique ? Construction scolaire, politique et idéologie en Angleterre du New Labour à la Coalition (1997-2012)Françoise GranoulhacFrom 1997 to 2010 sustained investment in school building was observed in England, under successive Labour governments committed to the renewal of public services and to the promotion of education as a national priority. School architecture was thus made to support policies which aimed at raising all levels of educational achievement. This paper attempts to examine the different ideological and political motivations which account for the launch of a flagship programme, Building Schools for the Future and, under a new administration, for its withdrawal. How do school building policies tie in with Third Way values on the one hand, and the Big Society project on the other? Among the issues raised are the complex and sometimes tense relationships between architects and policy-makers and the consequences political decisions and their implementation may have on the design of school space. Labour and the Coalition have adopted opposite approaches, the former favouring educational and social objectives, the latter questioning the role of the architect and the impact of school environments. In spite of political and ideological differences, similar lines of thought and action can however be detected.http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/5386Englandeducation policiesschool buildingsarchitectideology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Françoise Granoulhac
spellingShingle Françoise Granoulhac
L’architecte au service du politique ? Construction scolaire, politique et idéologie en Angleterre du New Labour à la Coalition (1997-2012)
Revue LISA
England
education policies
school buildings
architect
ideology
author_facet Françoise Granoulhac
author_sort Françoise Granoulhac
title L’architecte au service du politique ? Construction scolaire, politique et idéologie en Angleterre du New Labour à la Coalition (1997-2012)
title_short L’architecte au service du politique ? Construction scolaire, politique et idéologie en Angleterre du New Labour à la Coalition (1997-2012)
title_full L’architecte au service du politique ? Construction scolaire, politique et idéologie en Angleterre du New Labour à la Coalition (1997-2012)
title_fullStr L’architecte au service du politique ? Construction scolaire, politique et idéologie en Angleterre du New Labour à la Coalition (1997-2012)
title_full_unstemmed L’architecte au service du politique ? Construction scolaire, politique et idéologie en Angleterre du New Labour à la Coalition (1997-2012)
title_sort l’architecte au service du politique ? construction scolaire, politique et idéologie en angleterre du new labour à la coalition (1997-2012)
publisher Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines
series Revue LISA
issn 1762-6153
publishDate 2013-11-01
description From 1997 to 2010 sustained investment in school building was observed in England, under successive Labour governments committed to the renewal of public services and to the promotion of education as a national priority. School architecture was thus made to support policies which aimed at raising all levels of educational achievement. This paper attempts to examine the different ideological and political motivations which account for the launch of a flagship programme, Building Schools for the Future and, under a new administration, for its withdrawal. How do school building policies tie in with Third Way values on the one hand, and the Big Society project on the other? Among the issues raised are the complex and sometimes tense relationships between architects and policy-makers and the consequences political decisions and their implementation may have on the design of school space. Labour and the Coalition have adopted opposite approaches, the former favouring educational and social objectives, the latter questioning the role of the architect and the impact of school environments. In spite of political and ideological differences, similar lines of thought and action can however be detected.
topic England
education policies
school buildings
architect
ideology
url http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/5386
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