Available Formats
Raised to Obey: The Rise and Spread of Mass Education
By (Author) Agustina Paglayan
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
26th February 2025
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Educational strategies and policy
Primary and middle schools
History of education
Sociology
Political control and freedoms
320.01
Hardback
384
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
How the expansion of primary education in the West emerged not from democratic ideals but from the states desire to control its citizens
Nearly every country today has universal primary education. But why did governments in the West decide to provide education to all children in the first place In Raised to Obey, Agustina Paglayan offers an unsettling answer: the introduction of broadly accessible primary education was not mainly a response to industrialization, or fueled by democratic ideals, or even aimed at eradicating illiteracy or improving skills. It was motivated instead by elites fear of the massesand the desire to turn the savage, unruly, and morally flawed children of the lower classes into well-behaved future citizens who would obey the state and its laws.
Drawing on unparalleled evidence from two centuries of education provision in Europe and the Americas, and deploying rich data that capture the expansion of primary education and its characteristics, this sweeping book offers a political history of primary schools that is both broad and deep. Paglayan shows that governments invested in primary schools when internal threats heightened political elites anxiety around mass violence and the breakdown of social order.
Two hundred years later, the original objective of disciplining children remains at the core of how most public schools around the world operate. The future of education systems and their ability to reduce poverty and inequalityhinges on our ability to understand and come to terms with this troubling history.
Agustina S. Paglayan is assistant professor of political science at the University of California, San Diego, and nonresident fellow at the Center for Global Development. Her work has been covered by The Economist, the Washington Post, Devex, NPR, and NBC.