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Strange bedfellows: The new neoliberalism of catholic schooling in the United States Cover

Strange bedfellows: The new neoliberalism of catholic schooling in the United States

By: Kevin Burke  
Open Access
|Dec 2012

Abstract

The article utilizes critical social theory and critical religious theory to examine the emergent and historically aberrant alignment between Catholic schools and neoliberal market-based reforms in the United States. The author traces the historical split between Catholic and public schooling, attending to the role of the litigious in shaping American parochial contexts. In the face of declining enrollments and vocations as well as skyrocketing tuition and a contracting share of the educational ‘market,’ Catholic leadership has sought public support through market instruments (tax credits and vouchers) in order to preserve dying religious schools. Lost in this paradigm shift is the irony of the move from proud separatism to a governmental reliance that would have seemed abhorrent thirty years ago. Missing, too, in the rhetoric of ‘saving Catholic schools’ is concern for the harm done to education on a whole when religious schools are presented as competitors with, rather than alternatives to, a free public education. Examined through the lens of the largest provider of Catholic schoolteachers in the United States, the article ultimately concludes that the public good is being sacrificed at the altar of religious pride.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/v10159-012-0009-5 | Journal eISSN: 1338-2144 | Journal ISSN: 1338-1563
Language: English
Page range: 177 - 197
Published on: Dec 28, 2012
Published by: University of Trnava, Faculty of Education
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2012 Kevin Burke, published by University of Trnava, Faculty of Education
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons License.