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Articles

Principal self-government and subjectification: the exercise of principal autonomy in the Western Australian Independent Public Schools programme

Pages 273-285 | Received 13 Mar 2013, Accepted 02 Aug 2013, Published online: 03 Sep 2013
 

Abstract

The launch of the Independent Public Schools (IPS) programme in Western Australia (WA) in 2010 reflects the neoliberal policy discourse of decentralisation and school self-management sweeping across many of the world’s education systems. IPS provides WA state school principals with decision-making authority in a range of areas, including the employment of staff and managing school budgets. Using an analytical toolkit provided by Michel Foucault and Foucauldian scholarship, this article examines how the IPS programme functions as a regime of government and self-government. Data collected from two IPS principals is used to examine the subjective effects of power as it is exercised in the IPS regime. The article finds that the IPS initiative introduces new possibilities for principals to actively participate in practices of self-formation, through which these principals self-steer, exercise their freedom and govern themselves and their schools. It illustrates how governmental mechanisms depend on, harness and shape the autonomy of these principals, and how their individual practices of self-government align with neoliberal governmentalities.

Acknowledgements

The author would like to acknowledge and thank Professor Barry Down and the anonymous reviewers for their helpful and constructive feedback on earlier versions of this article.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Brad Gobby

Brad Gobby is a lecturer in the School of Education at Curtin University. His areas of research interest include governmentality, the genealogy of the social and the relationship between school reform and governmental rationalities.

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