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New racism, meritocracy and individualism : constraining affirmative action in education

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by M Augoustinos, K Tuffin, Danielle EveryDanielle Every
This article presents a discursive analysis of student talk ondisadvantage and affirmative action from two focus group discussions on ‘race’ relations in Australia. Our analysis builds upon previous research in the discursive tradition on affirmative action and demonstrates how participants draw on resources, which construct affirmative action as largely problematic. Liberal principles such as individualism, merit, and egalitarianism were currently drawn upon to justify, argue and legitimate opposition toa ffirmative action. Speakers managed their opposition to affirmative action while presenting as fair, principled and lacking in prejudice. One argument, which was commonly deployed, constructed affirmative action as undermining meritocratic principles and ideals. This meritocratic discourse has a self-sufficient, taken-for-granted quality which participants assumed to be a moral and normative standard that needed to be protected and upheld. This argument was also associated with a closely related one that ‘everyone should be treated equally or the same’, regardless of social background. Although our analysis emphasizes the deployment of discursive resources that function primarily to uphold the ideals of meritocracy, individualism and equality, participants did produce talk that on occasion challenged the ideology of individual achievement and acknowledged the existence of Aboriginal disadvantage. We discuss how these contradictions are reflective of the competing values of egalitarianism and individualism in western liberal democracies like Australia and how the language of the ‘new racism’ is framed by such ideological dilemmas and ambivalence.

History

Volume

16

Issue

3

Start Page

315

End Page

339

Number of Pages

25

eISSN

1460-3624

ISSN

0957-9265

Location

UK

Publisher

Sage Publications

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Massey University; TBA Research Institute; University of Adelaide;

Era Eligible

  • No

Journal

Discourse and society.

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