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Peter McLaren, Distinguished Professor in Critical Studies, Chapman University and author of Pedagogy of Insurrection.
"In this collection of essays, Peters and Besley examine the global return of national populism, placing it within the broader context of its historical and philosophical origins, and exploring its serious implications for education."
Fazal Rizvi, Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne
"In their new book, Michael Peters and Tina Besley address the multifaceted contemporary crises of liberal democracy. So-called "neo"-liberalism has created fertile ground for the germination of a panoply of anti-liberalisms, variously classified as ethnonationalist, racist, sexist, and homophobic. Sometimes these symptoms of social malaise are tied together under the umbrella word "fascist"- in a reminder of the worst of the twentieth
century's anti-liberal horrors. The important question Peters and Besley address in this book is the relationship between these anti-liberalisms and social inequality. The symptoms of fascism may well be proxies for a deep
seated disease that goes to the heart of liberalism itself."
Mary Kalantzis, Professor, Department of Education, Policy, Organization and Leadership, University of Illinois, USA
"The indefatigable and ever-creative Michael Peters, with Tina Besley has done it again. Critical times require critical theory that works the dialectic of facts and norms, systems and cultures, traditions and innovations, the global and the local, the big picture and the forensic detail. This book has the best qualities of critical thinking in spades and as such demands the best of us as critical readers and citizens in response."
Trevor Hogan, Co-ordinating Editor of Thesis Eleven: Critical Theory and Historical Sociology, Australia