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ID174008
Title ProperPerils and Penalties of Meritocracy
Other Title InformationSanctioning Inequalities and Legitimating Prejudice
LanguageENG
AuthorReay, Diane
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article deploys insights from Michael Young’s 1958 satire The Rise of the Meritocracy to challenge the dominant ideology of meritocracy in contemporary British society. It draws on ethnographic research in schools over a twenty‐five year period to illustrate the damage the illusion of meritocracy inflicts on children and young people, but particularly those from working class backgrounds. It argues that the consequences of the pretence of meritocracy are to be found in everyday practices of testing, hyper‐competition and setting, and beyond the classroom in the designation of predominantly working class schools as ‘rubbish schools for rubbish learners’. It concludes that, beyond the negative consequences for working class learners, there are wider consequences for British society, exacerbating social divisions and encouraging the growth of distrust, prejudice, envy, resentment, and contempt between different social groups.
`In' analytical NotePolitical Quarterly Vol. 91, No.2; Apr-Jun 2020: p.405-412
Journal SourcePolitical Quarterly 2020-06 91, 2
Key WordsSocial Mobility ;  Neoliberalism ;  Meritocracy ;  Social Class ;  Educational Inequalities