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The Politics of Education Reform: Charter Schools in New Orleans | Policy Stories

April 11, 2024 By admin

To learn more, pick up a copy of “The Politics of Institutional Reform: Katrina, Education, and the Second Face of Power” by Terry M. Moe, available here: https://amzn.to/2YeYPRb.

In the normal politics of reform, bad institutions are protected by powerful vested interests, making them difficult or impossible to fix. In the New Orleans school system after Hurricane Katrina, however, we get the rare opportunity to observe what happens when that power—which was destroyed by the storm—is removed from the equation. The result was a revolution, suggesting that there is a vast revolutionary potential among everyday decision makers who want to fix their failing institutions—a potential that, during normal times, is stifled by power but only waiting to be liberated.

For more information, visit the PolicyEd page here: https://www.policyed.org/policy-stories/politics-institutional-reform/video

Additional resources:

Read “The Politics of Institutional Reform: Katrina, Education, and the Second Face of Power, ” by Terry M. Moe, available at: https://amzn.to/2YeYPRb.

Listen to Terry Moe on EconTalk with Russ Roberts here: https://www.econtalk.org/terry-moe-on-educational-reform-katrina-and-hidden-power/.

Read “An Accidental Revolution,” about Terry Moe’s book, in the City Journal, available at: https://www.city-journal.org/education-reform-new-orleans.

Learn more about The Politics of Institutional Reform: https://www.hoover.org/research/politics-institutional-reform-katrina-education-and-second-face-power

Visit https://www.policyed.org/ for more insights on public policy.

– Subscribe to PolicyEd’s YouTube channel: http://bit.ly/PolicyEdSub
– Follow PolicyEd on Twitter: http://bit.ly/PolicyEdTwit
– Follow PolicyEd on Instagram: http://bit.ly/PolicyEdInsta

Filed Under: education videos Tagged With: charter schools, education, Education Reform, failing institutions, Hoover Institute, Hoover Institution, improving schools., Institutional Reform, new orleans, parent choice, politics of education, politics of school reform, Power, public schools, reform, school boards, school choice, school improvement, school reform, Second Face of Power, special interests, Teachers Unions, Vested Interests

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