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Governance of Early Care and Education Politics and Policy in France and Sweden. Michelle J. Neuman, Ph.D. Columbia University EECERA Conference, Prague – 31 August, 2007.
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Governance of Early Care and EducationPolitics and Policy in France and Sweden Michelle J. Neuman, Ph.D. Columbia University EECERA Conference, Prague – 31 August, 2007 Research funding from: German Marshall Fund of the U.S., American-Scandinavian Foundation, Council for European Studies/Florence Gould Foundation, Teachers College Office for Policy Research, and Columbia University Public Policy Consortium.
Rationale for the Study • Why governance of ECE? • Why France and Sweden? • Why 1980-2005?
Research Questions • How does the national context influence ECE governance? • Which actors and ideas (politics) benefit under different institutional arrangements? • What are the consequences for ECE policy outcomes (quality, access, coherence)?
Conceptual Framework: Governance of Early Care & Education ECE Politics 2 National Context ECE Governance ECE Policy Outcomes 1 3 Note: Numbers refer to research questions
Research Design • Data collection: Fieldwork - Archival and document research - Semi-structured interviews • Comparative, qualitative case study analysis Today: Focus on decentralization findings
(De)centralization of ECE in France and Sweden: Origins and Process
Conceptual Framework: Decentralization of ECE ECE Politics National Context Decentralization ECE Policy Outcomes
France: Limited and Incremental Institutional Change in Ed. System • Strong Republican values include centralization • Since 19th century, preschool part of education system • Early 1980s, Socialists initiated ed. decentralization • 1989 – legal right to preschool; universal coverage 3-5 • Since 1990, few administrative reforms to preschools
France: Universal Coverage of 3-5s in Preschools by 1990 Source: OECD
France: Decentralization and Diversification for Infants-toddlers • Child care linked to health and social policy domains • 1981 - Expansion of crèches = national priority • 1986 – Decentralized child care administration • No clear legal responsibility for child care • 1988 – “childhood contracts” provide incentives to local authorities to expand and improve provision
France: Paradox of “Free Choice” • Since 1990s – rhetoric of “free choice” • Focus on supporting family day care and nannies • More generous long paid parental leave policies • Concern with unemployment underlies policy • Recent reforms seek to expand private provision
France: Most Children under 3 cared for by Parents or a Family Day Care Provider Drees: 2002
Sweden: “Educare” Approach • Early childhood – key part of welfare state • 1970s and 80s – Expansion of local child care, centralized funding, and regulations • 1991-1994 - Non-socialist government • Rising unemployment & large budget deficits • Supported private for-profit providers • Created a “care” allowance instead of formal services
Sweden: Shift to Goal-Governing • 1991 – Local Government Act = shift from central rules to “goal governing” of ECE • Earmarked funds block grants to municipalities • 1995 – legal requirement for municipalities to provide child care to 1-6 year olds with working parents • Local governments facing budget crunch responded with higher fees and lower quality standards
Sweden: Recentralization? • 1995 - Return of Social Democrats to government • Improved economy, less unemployment • 1996-2003 – “Lifelong learning” reforms • Shift all ECE to Ministry of Education • Preschool curriculum – pedagogical steering • Universal preschool for 4 and 5 year olds • Maximum fee to rectify disparities in local fees • Targeted funding to steer decentralized system
Sweden: Increasing Proportion of Children Enrolled in Preschool since mid-1970s
Consequences of Decentralization for Access • Geographical disparities - less in Sweden than in France • Greater parent “choice”, but may not benefit children • Family day care: • increase in France • decrease in Sweden
Sweden: More Families Choosing Preschool Over Family Day Care, 1975–2003 Source: Skolverket
France: Rising Numbers of Authorized and Employed Family Day Care Providers Source: DREES, 2003
Consequences of Decentralization for Quality • Deregulation = larger group sizes and child-staff ratios in Sweden • Targeted financial incentives support can quality improvement Deregulation
Consequences of Decentralization for Coherence • Some improved local coordination across ECE services • More challenging in France because of different levels of responsibility – 2 strong sectors • Lack of coherence between individual and group child care raises concerns about child well-being
Implications • Decentralization raises serious equity concerns • Local politics and resources determine services available to families • Shifts political focus to new actors and institutions • Freedom and democracy = the need for local capacity • National steering & targeted funding reduce inequities Institutional history, economic context, and ideology play roles France and Sweden on different paths