Democratizing Participation presents a critical examination of voter participation in the Citywide and Community Education Council (CCEC) elections of New York City, revealing deep disparities and systemic shortcomings in democratic engagement. Despite the 2021 expansion of voting rights to all public-school parents, all three elections held since then were marked by alarmingly low turnout. The parents of only three percent of the students voted, with Black, Hispanic, Native American, and economically disadvantaged communities significantly underrepresented.
Drawing on interviews with a wide range of stakeholders, the study identifies key barriers to participation, such as awareness, access, relevance, affordability, and trust, and presents a comprehensive set of reform options. These range from administrative improvements to legislative changes, including bold considerations such as Board vs Mayoral control, participation grants, and sortition.
By connecting the findings from New York to broader questions of democratic resilience, Democratizing Participation underscores the urgent need for institutional reform and inclusive governance. It is a compelling call to action for anyone invested in strengthening democracy through equitable participation.
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. The New York City Public School System in Historical Perspective
Chapter 3. The New York City Public School System and Its Governance
Chapter 4. From Data Analysis to Interviews and Fieldwork: A Methodological Note
Chapter 5. The Elections for the Citywide and Community Councils (CCECs), 2021-2025
Chapter 6. Drivers and Obstacles of CCEC Election Participation
Chapter 7. Options for Modification to the Current Model
Chapter 8. Alternative Future Pathways
Chapter 9. Conclusion
About the Author :
Markus S. Schulz is Researcher at the Max Weber Center for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies, Germany, and the New School for Social Research, New York. Schulz has published widely, including many books and articles on social theory, political culture, democratic participation, media, and future imagination. He won national and international recognition, including the ISA Bielefeld Prize for the Internationalization of Sociology, the Candace Rogers Award of the Eastern Sociological Society, the Elise Boulding Award, and the World Society Foundation Award. Schulz served as Vice President for Research of the International Sociological Association, President of the Third ISA Sociology Forum, and founding editor of the WebForum.
Review :
Markus Schulz provides a nuanced and compelling study of the promise and limitations of deliberative democracy in urban school districts. It stands among the very best books on the governance of New York City’s public schools.
Civic engagement and public participation have lately become something of a palliative du jour for all manner of political and social ills. But, contrary to much popular perception, this complex set of capacities is constructed and mediated by a host of cultural, political, economic, and social factors and forces that play significant roles in shaping its characteristics and relative efficacy. As such, this volume, Democratizing Participation: Shared Governance in the Public School System of New York City, by Markus S. Schulz, Fellow of the Max Weber Center for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies in Germany, has rendered education professionals and researchers, policy analysts, and scholars interested in the requisites of democratic agency and governance an important service. The book examines New York’s experience with an ongoing effort to permit direct parental election of Public Schools Citywide and Community Education Councils to assist in leadership of its sprawling and heterogeneous school system. Schulz offers a subtle and unvarnished analysis of the initiative to date, including its extremely low voter participation rates, to identify possible alternative steps forward for citizen engagement in city school governance. Grounded in careful analysis of several factors shaping participation as well as New York City’s complex school administrative organization and richly underpinned by relevant scholarship on democracy and the role of education in its sustenance, this book eschews romantic paeans in favor of a measured, multivalent, and thoughtful appraisal of an important civic experiment. In consequence, it rewards its readers with nuanced insights into the array of factors mediating democratic participation and the manifold challenges implicit in securing its strengths for all this nation’s residents.
Paradoxically, at various times, New York City’s public school system has been a national leader in both top-down and bottom-up accountability. This clear-headed and data-informed study closely examines the sometimes bewildering amalgam of centralization and decentralization its governance system presents today. It provides a wary, yet hopeful, set of insights for those who value both participatory democracy and professional expertise