Abstract
Abstract This paper explores the relationships between sociology, democracy and education. Its main argument is that post‐modernist theory (in spite of its own inherent inconsistencies) can be interpreted as a constructive challenge to the hierarchical presuppositions of academic sociology. It can thus help to provide a theoretical framework for formulating a new set of institutional arrangements for social inquiry, which would reconstitute sociology as a democratic educational practice. In order for this to occur, sociology must recognise that the problematic nature of the social relationships of authoritative interpretation constitute a key theoretical problem: a ‘democratic’ sociology must re‐focus its efforts on formulating methods for critique which would help to enfranchise practitioners in the rigorous analysis of their work.
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