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Success and Luck - Cosmopolitanism and Private Education

Sociological discussion programme, presented by Laurie Taylor. Success and luck and the myth of meritocracy. Also, do privately educated young women have a cosmopolitan world view?

Success and Luck: Good Fortune and the Myth of Meritocracy. Laurie Taylor talks to Robert H. Frank, Professor of Economics at Cornell University's Johnson School of Management, about the role luck has to play in life's successes, or failures. Frank argues that chance is much more significant than people give it credit for. Lynsey Hanley, writer and Visiting Fellow at the Research Centre for Literature and Cultural History at Liverpool John Moores University, joins the discussion. Also, Claire Maxwell, Reader of Sociology of Education at the UCL Institute of Education, University College London, talks about her co-authored paper looking at the attitudes of privately-educated young women towards the idea of cosmopolitanism. Did they feel like global citizens, or were their aspirations confined to the local and the national?

Producer: Natalia Fernandez.

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28 minutes

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READING LISTΜύ

Elite Education: International Perspectives, edited by Claire Maxwell, Peter Aggleton (Routledge, 2016)

Robert H. Frank, Success and Luck: Good Fortune and the Myth of Meritocracy, (Princeton University Press, 2016)

Creating Cosmopolitan Subjects: The Role of Families and Private Schools in England, by Claire Maxwell and Peter Aggleton. ΜύPublished in the journal Sociology, 2016. Volume 50

Lynsey Hanley, Respectable: The Experience of Class, (Allen Lane, 2016)





Broadcasts

  • Wed 7 Dec 2016 16:00
  • Mon 12 Dec 2016 00:15

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