The Rise of Individual Agency in Conceptions of Society: Textbooks Worldwide, 1950-2011

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract
A broadly recognized sociological insight is that rising levels of individualism increasingly characterize a growing number of countries. This article examines the extent to which schooling is altered by, and transmits, this core cultural shift. It analyzes 476 secondary school social science textbooks from 78 countries from 1950 to 2011 to see whether they increasingly portray society as made up of agentic individual actors of all sorts (e.g., children, women, minorities). It is found that emphases on older social institutions remain stable, but there are striking worldwide increases in emphases on people, especially ones empowered with rights. This global peopling of social science instruction, especially strong in the recent neoliberal decades, characterizes every type of country and textbook analyzed, and occurs over and above other features of the sample.

Description

Type of resource text
Date created 2017

Creators/Contributors

Author Lerch, Julia
Author Bromley, Patricia
Author Ramirez, Francisco O.
Author Meyer, John W.

Subjects

Subject Agency
Subject empowerment
Subject individualism
Subject rights
Subject textbooks
Genre Article

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License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license (CC BY).

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Graduate School of Education Open Archive

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