Bialystok, LaurenWright, JJ (Jessica)Berzins, TaylorGuy, CaileighOsborne, Em2024-01-242024-01-242020Lauren Bialystok, Jessica Wright, Taylor Berzins, Caileigh Guy & Em Osborne (2020) The appropriation of sex education by conservative populism, Curriculum Inquiry, 50:4, 330-351, https://doi.org/10.1080/03626784.2020.1809967https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14078/3392Curriculum change involves struggles among political actors and interest groups, and those efforts related to sex education have been noted for their particularly vexatious character. When Doug Ford was elected Premier of Ontario, Canada in 2018, he immediately repealed the comprehensive health curriculum of 2015 and attempted to muzzle teachers during the 2018–2019 school year, only to unveil a strikingly similar “new” curriculum for 2019–2020.This article analyses Ford’s treatment of sex education as part of a conservative populist agenda. Using Critical Discourse Analysis, we divide the government’s approach into six components that illustrate how anti-elitism and fact-bending drove curriculum policy. Our analysis contributes to discussions in curriculum studies and educational politics by connecting the recently ascendant political ideologies in the West with the already contentious area of sex education.enAll Rights Reservedsex educationpopulismeducation policycurriculum changeOntario“post-truth”Doug FordThe appropriation of sex education by conservative populismArticlehttps://doi.org/10.1080/03626784.2020.1809967