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Broschek, Jörg – Comparative Education, 2021
The development of the modern nation-state was an inherently centralising process. Education policy and the institutionalisation of mass public schooling played a key role in this process, facilitating industrialisation and the generation of mass loyalty toward the state. In almost all federal systems, however, education policy remained an…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Educational Policy, Administrative Organization, Government School Relationship
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Scheunpflug, Annette – Comparative Education, 2015
This paper addresses the situation of non-governmental religious schools in Germany. The available empirical data demonstrate an increasing demand for these schools in recent decades. In this paper, possible causes of this development are discussed. First, the given constitutional framework for religion in governmental and non-governmental schools…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Foreign Countries, Church Role, Government Role
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Klumpp, Matthias; de Boer, Harry; Vossensteyn, Hans – Comparative Education, 2014
The concepts of differentiation and profiling are cornerstones in discussions about the organisation of contemporary higher education systems, following the trends of massification and global competition. This contribution provides a system-level description and comparison of the German and Dutch higher education systems regarding these topics,…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries, Excellence in Education
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Davies, Pat – Comparative Education, 1996
Explores alternative arrangements for adult access to higher education in England and Wales, France, and Germany, and examines the impact of such arrangements on the relationship between the state and higher education. Draws on Weiler's theory of compensatory legitimation to explain why the noise about such policy innovations is louder than the…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Adult Students, College Admission, Comparative Education