Educational and spatial justice in rural and urban areas in three Nordic countries: a meta-ethnographic analysis

This article is based on a meta-ethnographic analysis of educational research from rural and urban areas in Finland, Norway and Sweden following the reorganisation of educational supply there in line with market policies. Edward Soja’s concept of spatial justice shapes the analysis. Using meta-ethno...

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Main Authors: Dennis Beach, Tuuli From, Monica Johansson, Elisabet Öhrn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Education Inquiry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20004508.2018.1430423
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spelling doaj-bc18472f5d0c4a2a8ab78d8622e320fc2020-11-24T21:40:16ZengTaylor & Francis GroupEducation Inquiry2000-45082018-01-019142110.1080/20004508.2018.14304231430423Educational and spatial justice in rural and urban areas in three Nordic countries: a meta-ethnographic analysisDennis Beach0Tuuli From1Monica Johansson2Elisabet Öhrn3University of GothenburgUniversity HelsinkiUniversity of GothenburgUniversity of GothenburgThis article is based on a meta-ethnographic analysis of educational research from rural and urban areas in Finland, Norway and Sweden following the reorganisation of educational supply there in line with market policies. Edward Soja’s concept of spatial justice shapes the analysis. Using meta-ethnography, we try to present a contextualising narrative account of spatial justice and injustice in the education systems in the three countries. Thirty-one Nordic ethnographic publications (a mix of monographs, book chapters and articles) have been used in the meta-analysis. Just over half of them come from Sweden, and most are from urban education studies. The other half are relatively evenly divided between Norway and Finland. All were published between 2000 and 2017. Sweden represents an extreme position in relation to the new politics of education markets. Its promotion of school choice and schools-for-profit has attracted significant attention from ethnographic researchers in recent decades and is given particular attention in the article.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20004508.2018.1430423Democracyparticipationmarket reformmarginalisationethnographies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dennis Beach
Tuuli From
Monica Johansson
Elisabet Öhrn
spellingShingle Dennis Beach
Tuuli From
Monica Johansson
Elisabet Öhrn
Educational and spatial justice in rural and urban areas in three Nordic countries: a meta-ethnographic analysis
Education Inquiry
Democracy
participation
market reform
marginalisation
ethnographies
author_facet Dennis Beach
Tuuli From
Monica Johansson
Elisabet Öhrn
author_sort Dennis Beach
title Educational and spatial justice in rural and urban areas in three Nordic countries: a meta-ethnographic analysis
title_short Educational and spatial justice in rural and urban areas in three Nordic countries: a meta-ethnographic analysis
title_full Educational and spatial justice in rural and urban areas in three Nordic countries: a meta-ethnographic analysis
title_fullStr Educational and spatial justice in rural and urban areas in three Nordic countries: a meta-ethnographic analysis
title_full_unstemmed Educational and spatial justice in rural and urban areas in three Nordic countries: a meta-ethnographic analysis
title_sort educational and spatial justice in rural and urban areas in three nordic countries: a meta-ethnographic analysis
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Education Inquiry
issn 2000-4508
publishDate 2018-01-01
description This article is based on a meta-ethnographic analysis of educational research from rural and urban areas in Finland, Norway and Sweden following the reorganisation of educational supply there in line with market policies. Edward Soja’s concept of spatial justice shapes the analysis. Using meta-ethnography, we try to present a contextualising narrative account of spatial justice and injustice in the education systems in the three countries. Thirty-one Nordic ethnographic publications (a mix of monographs, book chapters and articles) have been used in the meta-analysis. Just over half of them come from Sweden, and most are from urban education studies. The other half are relatively evenly divided between Norway and Finland. All were published between 2000 and 2017. Sweden represents an extreme position in relation to the new politics of education markets. Its promotion of school choice and schools-for-profit has attracted significant attention from ethnographic researchers in recent decades and is given particular attention in the article.
topic Democracy
participation
market reform
marginalisation
ethnographies
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20004508.2018.1430423
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