Professor of Sociology, University of Manchester
Bridget is Director of CoDE (Centre on the Dynamics of Ethnicity) at the University of Manchester and her most recent book 'All in the Mix: race, class and school choice' (written with Carla de Tona) came out this year and is available free to down load (https://www.manchesteropenhive.com/view/9781526139306/9781526139306.xml). This book examines how parent's choose secondary schools for their chidlren and focuses on how parents talk about race, religion and class in the selection process.
Her previous books are: 'White Lives. The Interplay of 'race', class and gender in everyday life' (Routledge 2006) and 'Making Citizens: Public Rituals, Celebrations and Contestations of Citizenship' (Palgrave, 2014).
Bridget is currently working on a project on ethnic inequalities in the cultural industries, focusing on museums and factual TV production.
She is also a governor in a primary school in Manchester.
Abolishing private schools is admirable, but won't make choosing a state one any easier for parents
Sep 28, 2019 13:46 pm UTC| Insights & Views
Labour have voted on plans to abolish private schools by removing their charitable status and redistributing their wealth to the state sector. At the partys conference delegates approved a motion for this to be included in...