Revista Internacional de Sociología de la Educación E-ISSN: Hipatia Press España

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Revista Internacional de Sociología de la Educación E-ISSN: 2014-3575 rise@hipatiapress.com España Valero, Diana Global Crises, Social Justice and Education Revista Internacional de Sociología de la Educación, vol. 1, núm. 3, octubre, 2012, pp. 314-316 Barcelona, España Available in: http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=317127651006 How to cite Complete issue More information about this article Journal's homepage in redalyc.org Scientific Information System Network of Scientific Journals from Latin America, the Caribbean, Spain and Portugal Non-profit academic project, developed under the open access initiative

i s E INTE RNATIO NAL JO URNAL O f SOCIOLOGY Of EDUCATION www.h.pahapress.com Instructions for authors, subscriptions and further details: http://rise.hipatiapress.com Global Crises, Social Justice and Education Diana Valero1 1) University ofzaragoza Date ofpublication: October 25th, 2012 To cite this artic1e: Valero, D. (2012). Global Crises, Social Justice and Education. [Review of the book]. Intemationa! Joumal of Socio1ogy of Education, 1(3),314 316. doi: 10.4471!rise.2012.17 To link tliis article: littp:l/dx.doi.orgil0.4471!rise.2012.17 PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR ARTICLE The terrns and conditions of use are related to the Open Journal Systern and to Creative Cornrnons Non-Conunercial and Non-Derivative License.

RlSE - lnternational Journal 01 Sociology 01 Education Vol. 1 No. 3 October 2012 pp. 314-316 Reviews (1) Apple, Michael W. (2010): Global Crises, Social Justice and Education. New York: Routlegde. ISBN 978-0-415-00597-9 Gbal Crises, Social Justice and Education" is a sociological study f power relationships that occur in education as a result of globalization, and how social movements can tender altematives to these relationships. This paper provides a strong theoretical and empirical basis, and advocates for a critical sociology ofeducation. The first chapter is airned at laying the foundation for the future analyses focusing on how education and globalization are related and at defrning the context in which this relation is developed, a raising irnmigration and an increasing integrated intemational economy. This context affects education by transferring the values of the global economy, which in most cases involves a reproduction ofthe neoliberal and neoconservative ethic in terrns of relationships based on dominance and subordination. The work atternpts to present a positive outlook on how these relationships materialize, by focusing on the practices of four specific areas where social movements achieve a relative amount of success in their clairns and involve not a complete change in the educational policy but a chal1enge to these power relations. Each of the next four chapters is devoted to a different region allowing a thorough and insightful review of each case, paying enough attention to their different realities and backgrounds, and proving that educational policies are influenced by the intemational economy. These regions cannot be understood as a complete panorama but instead provide examples ofhow critical educators and social movernents are necessary to deal with the political designs that, even being different in each country, work against social justice. Moreover, the examples from these countries il1ustrate how reforrn movernents have appeared worldwide as rooted facets of globalization. The first case, "New Literacies and New Rebel1ions in the Global Age," is dedicated to the United States, specifical1y to student activists in the irnmigrants rights movement. This chapter is a cal1to educators to support the efforts of students, providing opportunities to create a

RlSE -lnternational Journal ofsociology ofeducation 1 (3) 315 network of potential partners, as other organizations related to globalization and social justice, and to acquire useful knowledge for activism, for example applying digital literacies in campaigns for social justice. In Ihis way progressive movements rise against the consequences of an economic liberalism that requires public schools to transfer sorne specific knowledge to access the labor market, knowledge Ihat is likewise deterrnined and set by the ruling classes, which in turn perpetuates inequality. The second case, "From the Rightest "Coup" to the New Beginning of Progressive Politics in Japanese Education," uses an historical perspective to explain the current neoliberal trends calling for the return to imperial traditions and a pre-war model State intervention, taking rhetorical elements from British and American experiences. In 2006 the Liberal Government started reviewing the educationallaw of 1947, Ihis law replaced the law of 1890, the latest placed education as an obligation ofthe state while the law of 1947, developed after the WWII, identified education as a human right, Liberals understood Ihat law of 1947 was a Western imposition so they wanted to retum to the values of 1890. Progressive organizations fight against the control of the State on all fronts (social policies, labour market, education, etc.) which in turn generates frustration among the populace and allows a space of action for these organizations, Ihat win adherents every day. "Israel/Palestine, Unequal Power, and Movements for Democratic Education," the third case, is a critical examination of the relationships among social conflicts, education, the state and differential power in society. It offers three examples of schools that are the result of the community activists work. These counter-hegernonic schools made progress in areas related to inequality and disparity on the basis of ethnic origin, religion, and gender - all highly contentious issues in the IsraeliPalestine world. The case illustrates the different forces Ihat participated in each project and how they were developed, beginning with different political commitments and ideologies from different structural locations. Despite the inherent differences of each project Ihere is an undeniable value of "conscious building of coalitions" between the school and cornrnunities it serves. Latin America is the last of the four cases, although the example is focused on Mexico, specifically in the experience of two popular

316 Valero - Global Crises, Social Justice and Education [Book Review} educational institutions that focus their work on women in rural Mexico with low income, these community-based educational responses are occurring throughout Latin Arnerica. These experiences, that are forrns of responses to Neoliberalism, develop forrns of civil society that are consciously critical and offer alternative spaces of participation, structures and ideologies to fight against conservative movements. The authors end this chapter calling for unified resistance. The last chapter is a cry for action aimed at progressive educators and activists, inciting thern to leam with one and other to try to forrn a "decentralized unity." Also reports that sorne retrogressive movements are adapting the ways of doing used successfully by the progressive movements and civil society. To do this, the authors say that there must be a process of disarticulation and articulation of the progressive discourses and languages which can transforrn thern into elements of hegemonic powers. To understand this process, they proffer the employment of structural and poststructural theories, understanding thern in terrns ofan equal dialogue with complernentary objectives. Apple et al.'s work is not especially interested in the idea of radical change to the overall system but in providing theoretical and practical tools that will show progress in civil societies around the world. The novelty is that by making a critical analysis the authors focus on what social, cultural and educational movements have done and can do to fight against these relationships, seeing these movements as agents of radical change. Diana Valero, University ofzaragoza dvalero@unizar.es