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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.3935/rsp.v28i3.1808

Early Childhood Education and Care in Kosovo: A Targeted Educational Approach Producing and Maintaining Social and Gender Inequalities

Artan Mustafa orcid id orcid.org/0000-0003-4042-6658 ; University for Business and Technology (UBT), Faculty of Political Science, Prishtina, Kosovo


Full text: english pdf 620 Kb

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Full text: croatian pdf 620 Kb

page 390-390

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Abstract

This article examines participation in Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) in Kosovo based on a recent survey and administrative data. Kosovo’s ECEC policy aims to provide education and care for children aged 0 to 6 through an approach consisting of highly targeted public services for more vulnerable social groups, while expecting the rest to rely on the market or the family. It also provides a universal, public (2.5 hours a day) school preparatory programme for children aged 5-6 years. Availability of ECEC services has been rising, but remains well below the levels of the countries in the region. New services are increasingly coming through a market-based provision which leaves large social groups such as low-income families, rural families, parents with lower educational status and other socio-economically disadvantaged parents worse off. Since ECEC is considered highly relevant for children’s personal development and success in school, as well as for female participation in the labour market, the findings suggest that the current policy contributes towards cementing and furthering social and gender inequalities in the long run. In the absence of more comprehensive public services and other supportive family policy measures, Kosovo maintains a strong implicit familialistic policy with a weak potential to contribute to women’s employment.

Keywords

Kosovo; ECEC; defamilialisation; familialism; privatisation

Hrčak ID:

269198

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/269198

Publication date:

16.12.2021.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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