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Dive into the research topics where Annabelle Allouch is active.

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Featured researches published by Annabelle Allouch.


British Journal of Sociology of Education | 2016

Credentials, talent and cultural capital: a comparative study of educational elites in England and France

Phillip Brown; Sally Power; Gerbrand Tholen; Annabelle Allouch

This article examines student accounts of credentials, talent and academic success, against a backdrop of the enduring liberal ideal of an education-based meritocracy. The article also examines Bourdieu’s account of academic qualifications as the dominant source of institutionalised cultural capital, and concludes that it does not adequately account for comparative differences in the social structure of competition and ideological shifts in class (re)production in different national contexts. This analysis is based on an empirical investigation of elite students at Oxford University and Sciences Po in Paris. We investigated how they understand the competition for a livelihood and whether they see themselves as more ‘talented’ than students from non-elite universities. This investigation revealed important similarities and differences between British and French students that have significant sociological implications for the (re)production and legitimation of educational and labour market inequalities.


International Sociology | 2016

Giving something back? Sentiments of privilege and social responsibility among elite graduates from Britain and France

Sally Power; Annabelle Allouch; Phillip Brown; Gerbrand Tholen

This article explores the complex relationship between transnational elites and civil society through examining the contrasting orientations of two cohorts of ‘elite graduates’ from Paris and Oxford. Both cohorts believe their privileged status has been earned through hard work and ability. But they are also aware that they have benefited from advantages not available to all. Perhaps because of this, they express the need to ‘give something back’. However, the means through which they seek to discharge their social responsibilities are very different. While the Oxford graduates seek to ‘give something back’ through volunteering and third sector engagement, the Paris graduates will ‘give something back’ through public service. The article discusses how the contrasting relationship between the state, civil society and the education system in these two countries may shape dispositions, and speculates on the extent to which these elite recruits’ commitment to ‘give something back’ will make a difference.


International Studies in Sociology of Education | 2009

The minor roads to excellence: positive action, outreach policies and the new positioning of elite high schools in France and England

Annabelle Allouch; Hélène Buisson‐Fenet

Increased academic attention has been drawn to democratisation in higher education, following the implementation of affirmative action in America. However, the models of Access policies presented by certain European educational systems deserve more attention. France and Britain share a common position on elitism, although they define it according to very different principles: on the one hand, France emphases the old model of meritocracy through academic performance, whereas in Britain, some institutions still tend to favour a more hereditary transmission of ethos. A comprehensive comparison of ‘positive discrimination’ and Outreach policies allows us to try and rebuild the political conditions (and debates) around the implementation of these policies, which now target individuals rather than the usual macrosocial or territorial categories. Regulation patterns – although not yet finalised – reveal to some extent a general willingness for ‘potential and ability assessment’, which would make recruitment systems for higher education in both France and Britain less socially exclusive.


Research in Social Stratification and Mobility | 2013

The role of networks and connections in educational elites’ labour market entrance

Gerbrand Tholen; Phillip Brown; Sally Power; Annabelle Allouch


British Journal of Sociology | 2013

Self, Career and Nationhood: The contrasting aspirations of British and French elite graduates

Sally Power; Phillip Brown; Annabelle Allouch; Gerbrand Tholen


Education et sociétés | 2008

Formateurs ou "grands frères" ? Les tuteurs des programmes d'ouverture sociale des Grandes Écoles et des classes préparatoires

Annabelle Allouch; Agnès van Zanten


Education et Sociétés : Revue internationale de sociologie de l'éducation | 2008

Formateurs ou “grands frères” ?

Annabelle Allouch; Agnès van Zanten


L'Année Sociologique | 2016

L’éthique des élites scolaires. Du mérite à la responsabilité chez les étudiants de Sciences Po Paris et de l’Université d’Oxford

Annabelle Allouch; Phillip Brown; Sally Power; Gerbrand Tholen


Archive | 2013

L'ouverture sociale comme configuration : pratiques et processus de sélection et de socialisation des milieux populaires dans les établissements d'élite : une comparaison France-Angleterre

Annabelle Allouch


Education et sociétés | 2008

Trainers or Older Brothers

Annabelle Allouch; Agnès van Zanten

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Agnès van Zanten

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Hélène Buisson‐Fenet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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