One of the nation's fastest growing metropolitan areas, Wake
County, North Carolina, added more than a quarter million new
residents during the first decade of this century, an increase of
almost 45 percent. At the same time, partisanship increasingly
dominated local politics, including school board races. Against
this backdrop, Toby Parcel and Andrew Taylor consider the ways
diversity and neighborhood schools have influenced school
assignment policies in Wake County, particularly during 2000-2012,
when these policies became controversial locally and a topic of
national attention.
The End of Consensus explores the
extraordinary transformation of Wake County during this period,
revealing inextricable links between population growth, political
ideology, and controversial K–12 education policies.
Drawing on media coverage, in-depth interviews with community
leaders, and responses from focus groups, Parcel and Taylor's
innovative work combines insights from these sources with findings
from a survey of 1,700 county residents. Using a broad range of
materials and methods, the authors have produced the definitive
story of politics and change in public school assignments in Wake
County while demonstrating the importance of these dynamics to
cities across the country.