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Faithfully schooled for debate? - Thinking Aloud, by Simon Barrow

Simon Barrow is involved in the new Accord coalition, aiming at Reform of Faith Schools in the UK. Here he explains why, and what changes he would like to see made.

At the end of an interview about the work of Ekklesia last year, I was asked a pertinent personal question. “Is your own major professional concern in all this journalistic, campaigning or academic?” It wasn’t something that came out in the final product, because I think I just said “a bit of each”. But it made me reflect more on how those three approaches may complement or contradict one another.

Put positively, it seems to me that good journalism is about condensing fact and opinion for rapid consumption without confusing the two; that good campaigning is about effective advocacy which builds bridges for change; and that good academic work is about deepening human enquiry so that the difference between a matter of thought and an arcane point of scholarship becomes clearer.

The problem with campaigning is that there are enormous temptations to simplify, exaggerate and polarise in order to get a point across or build a support base sufficiently indignant to apply political pressure. This is not helped by the media naturally preferring ‘either-or’ narratives to ones marked by the kind of complexity, plurality and ambiguity which are the features of actual life… but which require a bit more unravelling than 2 minutes, a sound bite or 500 words will allow. Yet these are the currency of modern communication, along with a blogsophere that can dish out enlightenment and bile, discussion and demonisation in equal measures (with a far greater preponderance of the latter, the observant cynic might suggest).

The Limits of Politics - Thinking Aloud by Simon Barrow

For all too many people in Britain, politics appears to be a form of organised bickering and special pleading that intrudes in unwelcome or un-engaging ways on everyday life, but just has to be accepted – like road humps and rain clouds. For another, much smaller class of persons, it is a fascinating and all-absorbing occupation, seeping into every corner of human activity, demanding careful attention and observation.

The former demographic is, one can be sure, far closer to the heart of the Ministry of Justice, currently charged with finding ways of encouraging participation among the large number of people registered to vote who rarely participate in general elections and almost never in local ones – roughly 40 per cent and 60 per cent, respectively.

On the other hand, the professional political class, policy researchers, the commentariat and readers of worthy websites such as this one (who together probably make up less than 5 per cent of the population) are bound to be the ones salivating at the launch of Iain Dale’s new, all-encompassing print publication and online resource, Total Politics, which comes yelping at us like an excitable, over-informed puppy.

A fundamental problem? Thinking Aloud by Simon Barrow

Just how influential is fundamentalist Christianity in mainstream public life in Britain today?

Simon Barrow looks back at recent history.