A STUMBLING DEMOCRATIZATION. SCHOOLING AND SOCIAL COHESION IN CHILE, 1920-1960

Abstract

This article addresses the relationship between schooling and social cohesion in Chile during the mass schooling process that began with the compulsory school established in 1920. The extensive nature of this process intervened in the socially inclusive sense of education, evidencing the national fracture embodied in thousands of malnourished children. To understand the tensions and mutual transformations between the school as a builder of a common social denominator and the expectations of cohesive inclusion expressed in the democratizing discourse of the period, it analyses the coverage, the desertion and the school assistance policy. The results show that, although several actors diagnosed the physical-cognitive underdevelopment suffered by the child population, the educational policy was unequally inclusive, and it assumed that the social security system would face this problem indirectly.

Más información

Título de la Revista: ESTUDIOS SOCIALES-REVISTA UNIVERSITARIA SEMESTRAL
Volumen: 57
Número: 2
Editorial: UNIV NAC LITORAL
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Página de inicio: 211
Página final: 233
DOI:

10.14409/es.v57i2.8804

Notas: WOS-ESCI