Racial Formation in England: A critical analysis of the Sewell report

24 February 2022, 5.00 PM - 24 February 2022, 6.30 PM

Professor Leon Tikly (University of Bristol)

This event will be online - see link below for sign up

The paper provides an analysis and critique of the education component of the 2021 Sewell Report on Race and Ethnic Disparities. It commences by providing a critical summary of the report focusing on its spurious claims to objectivity, the erasure of racism and the inadequacy of its recommendations. The second part of the paper focuses on developing a contextualised analysis of the report. Omi and Winant’s ideas about racial formation are used to provide a lens through which to interpret the Sewell report as part of a wider hegemonic project of the right to redefine what it means to be British in the context of a deepening organic crises of capitalism. The paper outlines the nature of the crisis. It locates the report within a consideration of three ‘racial projects’ that have shaped education policy, namely, the nationalist, multicultural and antiracist projects. Through advocating a ‘colourblind’ approach to education policy and the selective appropriation of multicultural discourse, it will be argued that the report needs to be understood as part of a wider effort to reconfigure the nationalist project in response to crisis. It is suggested, however, that despite its many flaws, the Sewell report poses challenges for those who have traditionally been aligned to multiculturalism and antiracism in education. The paper concludes by setting out a vision for a new progressive project aimed at advancing racial and cultural justice that it is suggested, can begin to address these challenges.

Leon is UNESCO Chair in Inclusive Good Quality Education at the University of Bristol. He has conducted research and published widely on issues of race equality in education in the UK and South Africa. Leon currently directs a UKRI network plus on Transforming Education for Sustainable Futures with partners in Africa and India.

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Contact information

Please contact Yuhan Wang for more information - Yuhan.wang@bristol.ac.uk

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