Going left or right? A study of the policy rationale of the Chilean center-left coalition Concertación in Education

What does it mean to deliver left-wing policies in education nowadays? During most of the 20th century, political parties of the center-left traditionally fought for a welfare state and a comprehensive public education. However, in an era of advanced capitalism, these same parties have tended to adv...

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Main Author: Alejandra Falabella
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2021-01-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/5266
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spelling doaj-eb219786de3446d59adc84d359eadaf82021-02-23T00:48:29ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412021-01-0129010.14507/epaa.29.52662217Going left or right? A study of the policy rationale of the Chilean center-left coalition Concertación in EducationAlejandra Falabella0Universidad Alberto HurtadoWhat does it mean to deliver left-wing policies in education nowadays? During most of the 20th century, political parties of the center-left traditionally fought for a welfare state and a comprehensive public education. However, in an era of advanced capitalism, these same parties have tended to advocate and even deepen neoliberal and new public management reforms. In Chile, the center-left “Concertación” coalition governed for 20 years (1990-2010), inheriting a market-driven educational system established under the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. This paper, based on an analysis of official public speeches and documents (in total 62), examines the Concertación’s rationale and political project in school education. The coalition’s aim was to move from a “free market” to a regulated market, through a balanced formula that—while preserving the market framework—added greater state investment, compensatory programs, and performance accountability measures. Hypotheses circulated in the country that the Concertación did not deliver further transformations due to legal constraints, international pressure, and “conflict phobia”. Despite historical limitations and internal disputes, the research provides evidence that the government’s educational program, in large part, was true to its own system of thinking. Hence, the center-left coalition did not maintain the market-based model in spite of its governmental rationality, but because of it.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/5266center-leftsocial democracyneoliberalism in educationschool marketschile
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alejandra Falabella
spellingShingle Alejandra Falabella
Going left or right? A study of the policy rationale of the Chilean center-left coalition Concertación in Education
Education Policy Analysis Archives
center-left
social democracy
neoliberalism in education
school markets
chile
author_facet Alejandra Falabella
author_sort Alejandra Falabella
title Going left or right? A study of the policy rationale of the Chilean center-left coalition Concertación in Education
title_short Going left or right? A study of the policy rationale of the Chilean center-left coalition Concertación in Education
title_full Going left or right? A study of the policy rationale of the Chilean center-left coalition Concertación in Education
title_fullStr Going left or right? A study of the policy rationale of the Chilean center-left coalition Concertación in Education
title_full_unstemmed Going left or right? A study of the policy rationale of the Chilean center-left coalition Concertación in Education
title_sort going left or right? a study of the policy rationale of the chilean center-left coalition concertación in education
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2021-01-01
description What does it mean to deliver left-wing policies in education nowadays? During most of the 20th century, political parties of the center-left traditionally fought for a welfare state and a comprehensive public education. However, in an era of advanced capitalism, these same parties have tended to advocate and even deepen neoliberal and new public management reforms. In Chile, the center-left “Concertación” coalition governed for 20 years (1990-2010), inheriting a market-driven educational system established under the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. This paper, based on an analysis of official public speeches and documents (in total 62), examines the Concertación’s rationale and political project in school education. The coalition’s aim was to move from a “free market” to a regulated market, through a balanced formula that—while preserving the market framework—added greater state investment, compensatory programs, and performance accountability measures. Hypotheses circulated in the country that the Concertación did not deliver further transformations due to legal constraints, international pressure, and “conflict phobia”. Despite historical limitations and internal disputes, the research provides evidence that the government’s educational program, in large part, was true to its own system of thinking. Hence, the center-left coalition did not maintain the market-based model in spite of its governmental rationality, but because of it.
topic center-left
social democracy
neoliberalism in education
school markets
chile
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/5266
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