‘Choice’ discourse in BC child care: Distancing policy from
research
by Paul Kershaw, Assistant Professor, Human Early Learning Partnership
Faculty of Graduate Studies, University of British Columbia.
Childcare Resource and Research Unit, September 2004.
The gap between child care research and policy is growing in British
Columbia (BC). While policy changes are what one would expect from the
right-of-centre Liberal government, the gap runs contrary to its expressed
commitment to the design of early childhood development policy on the
basis of ‘science.’ The BC child care domain thus provides
a rich context in which to examine how ideology mediates the consumption
of research in the political arena. This article argues that the government’s
‘choice’ discourse facilitates the articulation of neoliberal
principles in a rhetorically neutral way while casting doubt on scholarship
that illuminates gender and class inequalities.
This Occasional Paper is available in an on-line format only. It is available
in this form with the permission of the journal in which it appears, the
Canadian Journal of Political Science, December, 2004,
Vol. 37. |
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