Publication | Closed Access
The Disintegration of Memphis-Shelby County, Tennessee: School District Secession and Local Control in the 21st Century
38
Citations
46
References
2018
Year
Southern United States HistoryEducationStark InequalitySocial SciencesEducational EquityAfrican American EducationSociology Of EducationAfrican American StudiesCivil RightsSuburban SecessionRacial EquityPublic PolicyHistory Of EducationEducation PoliticsMemphis-shelby CountyEqual Educational OpportunityLocal ControlSchool District SecessionCommunity DevelopmentCentral Suburban RationaleSociologyEducation ReformEducation Policy
In this qualitative case study, we explore the political impulses behind suburban secession from the 2013 Memphis-Shelby County merger, the largest school district consolidation in recent history. Decades removed from the Civil Rights Movement, during a period of stark inequality, colorblind law and policymaking, and a diminished understanding of education as a societal benefit, the central suburban rationale for secession, local control, carries new weight. It gives already privileged communities a race-neutral, legally sanctioned, and politically persuasive way to discuss resource accumulation that maps onto existing racial and economic segregation. Memphis-area lessons offer insight into an increasing number of secession struggles and enrich our understanding of how educational advantage is consolidated in the 21st-century metropolis.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1