Axis 2 "Organizations" summer scientific day: contracts, institutions, risks
Presentation 1:
Presentation 2:
Presentation 3:
In the winter of 2016, parents of pupils at Clos d'Ambert elementary school in Noisy-le-Grand, a Seine-Saint-Denis commune belonging to the new town of Marne-la-Vallée, organized to protest against the sectorization of their school at Victor Hugo middle school located in the working-class neighborhood of Pavé Neuf and designated as a priority by the city policy (QPV). This sectorization, undertaken for demographic reasons, is part of a national experiment to promote social diversity in secondary schools. It has the backing of local elected representatives, in particular the vice-president for education on the departmental council (PS), who is also the first deputy mayor of Noisy-le-Grand and a promoter of the experimental approach in the Seine-Saint-Denis department. The elected official seems convinced that he is acting in the general interest.
The elementary school, located in the Marnois pavilion neighborhood of salaried middle-class owner-occupiers, is also recruiting from the new town center built by the Socialist municipality. The neighborhood is gentrifying, and the newcomers seem to be spreading an instrumental, elitist vision of school choice. In fact, they are helping to create competition for places in the local private school, which until now had not been full.
Deploying from the school's core group of PEEP parents, the social movement leads several demonstrations and manages to enliven the local pages of the Parisien on several occasions. The watchword is refusal to be the " lab rats " of an insufficiently prepared and debated experiment. For many observers involved (parents, elected representatives, civil servants), this is a movement of owners who consider public services to be their own property, and who wish to preserve their own privacy in their local middle school, while stigmatizing the REP middle school in the low-income neighborhood next door. Refusing to debate or listen to the protesters' arguments, the departmental council and certain FCPE parents consider these parents to be "NIMBYs"
.