Abstract
In this paper I examine in detail the continued – and curious – popularity of
religious schools in an otherwise ‘secular’ twenty-first century Europe. To do this
I consider a number of motivations underwriting the decision to place one’s
child in a religious school and delineate what are likely the best empirically
supported explanations for the continued dominant position of Protestant and
Catholic schools. I then argue that institutional racism is an explanatory
variable that empirical researchers typically avoid, though it informs both
parental assessments of school quality as well as selective mechanisms many
mainstream religious schools use to function as domains of exclusion. I then
distinguish between religious schools in a dominant position from those
serving disadvantaged minorities and argue that the latter are able to play a
crucially important function other schools only rarely provide and hence that
vulnerable minorities may have reason to value.