Controversial Issues and the Rhetoric of Common Values
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Previous Research
3. Presenting the Case Studies
3.1. Values in Norwegian Education Policy
Basic schooling shall, as a whole, build upon the ethical foundational values that are anchored in Christianity. The responsibility that is laid upon school in this way makes it a duty for school to try to awaken and strengthen the pupil’s sense for values of an ethical nature. Considering their age and maturity, school must try to help them see that, in the varied circumstances of life, it should be asked what is good and evil, right and wrong. (…)The aim for school must be that foundational values such as truth, honesty, fairness, loyalty and loving-thy-neighbour really become values for the pupils, and thus decisive for their attitude to life and how they live their lives.
School shall base its practice on the values in the objectives clause of the Education Act. The objectives clause expresses values that unite the Norwegian society. These values, the foundation of our democracy, shall help us to live, learn and work together in a complex world and with an uncertain future. The core values are based on Christian and humanist heritage and traditions. They are also expressed in different religions and worldviews and are rooted in human rights.
3.2. The British Government and the Trojan Horse Affair: An Instance of the Rhetoric of Shared Values
‘The values I’m talking about—a belief in freedom, tolerance of others, accepting personal and social responsibility, respecting and upholding the rule of law—are the things we should try to live by every day. (…)And taken together, I believe this combination—our values and our respect for the history that helped deliver them and the institutions that uphold them—forms the bedrock of Britishness.’
‘The question is: should we actively promote this? I absolutely think we should. For a start, this is a matter of pride and patriotism. (…)[T]here are two other reasons why we should promote these values.The first is economic. I strongly believe our values form the foundation of our prosperity(…)The second is social. Our values have a vital role to play in uniting us.’
‘So I believe we need to be far more muscular in promoting British values and the institutions that uphold them.That’s what a genuinely liberal country does: it believes in certain values and actively promotes them. It says to its citizens: this is what defines us as a society.’
‘We are saying it isn’t enough simply to respect these values in schools—we’re saying that teachers should actively promote them. They’re not optional; they’re the core of what it is to live in Britain.’
- i.
- Essentialism. The rhetoric of shared values invites the user to see society as a bounded unit with an inner and stable essence, exaggerating internal similarity and external difference.
- ii.
- Conservatism. It becomes difficult to theorize change without pathologizing it.
- iii.
- Causal direction. When sociologists explain social cohesion as a function of shared values, there is a logical problem with the timeline because the effect comes before the cause.
- iv.
- The rhetoric of shared values misrepresents the distribution of values between and within groups. It overemphasises in-group agreement and underestimates between-group disagreement.
- v.
- It identitizes values, arguing that they should be upheld because they are ‘ours’ rather than that they are good, or right. This includes nationalising and religionising values.
- vi.
- It instrumentalizes values, arguing that we need them because of the positive side effects of social cohesion, rather than because it is good to live by them.
- vii.
- It traditionalises values, arguing that the legitimacy of a set of values arises from the past of a certain community, rather than in directing present and future action.
- viii.
- It excludes too many people. This becomes a problem if you need to invest in a particular cultural, historical or religious heritage in order to be seen as adhering to a set of values. Your opinions come to be viewed as a question of identity rather than ethics or politics. Minorities will stand at a structural disadvantage.
- i.
- Non-essentialism: Identity groups could be presented as historical and contextually shaped. Their stability is an empirical matter, influenced by power structures internal and external to the group.
- ii.
- Change-agnostic: Change or continuity are not seen as moral categories in and of themselves, but could be seen relative to achieving the values of the school.
- iii.
- Agency sensitive: Treats people and institutions as moral agents, not traditions and cultures.
- iv.
- Empirical: It does not assume that group belonging defines an individual’s values, but sees the distribution of values as an empirical question.
- v.
- Universalist: Provides arguments for the chosen values that are relevant to a universal audience, not place-specific.
- vi.
- Ethical: Provides the ethical argument for the chosen values, rather than instrumentalist side effects.
- vii.
- Political: Sees the chosen values as directing common action towards a future goal, rather than being legitimized by a common past.
- viii.
- Inclusive: The value ‘belongs’ to all who hold the value and act by it, regardless of group identity.
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Iversen, L.L. Controversial Issues and the Rhetoric of Common Values. Religions 2020, 11, 528. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100528
Iversen LL. Controversial Issues and the Rhetoric of Common Values. Religions. 2020; 11(10):528. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100528
Chicago/Turabian StyleIversen, Lars Laird. 2020. "Controversial Issues and the Rhetoric of Common Values" Religions 11, no. 10: 528. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100528
APA StyleIversen, L. L. (2020). Controversial Issues and the Rhetoric of Common Values. Religions, 11(10), 528. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11100528