Educating to secure the national interest


Autoria(s): Kelly, Stephen John
Data(s)

29/11/2015

Resumo

In this paper I examine how one political actor–former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd–proposes to use education for the purpose of securing national productivity and foreign policy. I work with Foucault’s suggestion that the apparatus of security is the essential technical instrument of governmentality and that the production of milieu, made up of human, spatial, temporal and cultural objects, and the government of risk are key strategies in the bio-politicisation of security. The discourse analysis also draws on Bacchi to problematise statements that (a) represent both the nation and regional neighbours as governable milieu within the ambit of a whole of government approach, and (b) locate literacy and education as both risk and solution in a security apparatus. My examination of the emergence of literacy and education as security technologies, takes account of the discursive effects of Rudd’s representation of the spaces and scale of national, geopolitical and global policy problems. I argue that in these examples of policy texts, education is used as a discursive tool to secure education workers and youth as subjects of economic interest and sovereign rule.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/93351/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/93351/1/Educating%20to%20secure%20the%20national%20interest%20AARE%202015.pdf

Kelly, Stephen John (2015) Educating to secure the national interest. In Australian Association of Research in Education Annual Conference, 28 November - 1 December 2015, Fremantle, W.A. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 2015 The Author

Fonte

Faculty of Education; School of Cultural & Language Studies in Education

Palavras-Chave #130204 English and Literacy Curriculum and Pedagogy (excl. LOTE ESL and TESOL) #160506 Education Policy #220202 History and Philosophy of Education #literacy #education #security #governmentality #biopolitics #policy #genealogy #discourse #globalisation #terror
Tipo

Conference Paper