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Participation Patterns in Adult <scp>E</scp>ducation: the role of institutions and public policy frameworks in resolving coordination problems
89
Citations
8
References
2013
Year
Cross‐national PatternsPublic Policy PerspectiveEducationPublic ParticipationEducational DevelopmentCitizen ParticipationSocial SciencesAdult EducationPolicy ImplementationAdult LearningEducational PolicyPublic Policy FrameworksGovernmental ProcessAdult LiteracyCollaborative GovernanceCivic EngagementPublic PolicySocial PolicyElementary Education Education Workforce DevelopmentEducational DistrictingPublic EducationPolitical ParticipationCoordination ProblemsSociologyLifelong LearningParticipation PatternsEducation PolicyPolitical ScienceEducation Economics
This article focuses on evidence regarding cross‐national patterns of participation in adult education and an interpretation of these patterns from an institutional and public policy perspective. The interpretation follows from the perspective that sustaining high and widely distributed levels of investment in the development and maintenance of skills over the lifespan of individuals is to a large extent interconnected with a high‐level of non‐market coordination via institutional arrangements and/or specific public policy measures. Such arrangements and measures are seen to alleviate coordination problems that otherwise lead to underinvestment in skills and/or inequity in the distribution of access to education and training and hence skills. Consequently, it is argued that institutional contexts and public policy measures condition participation patterns in adult education, and are thus worthwhile to understand better for the purposes of informing policy.
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