Constitutional rights to education and their relationship to national policy and school enrolment
ARTICLE
Jody Heymann, Amy Raub, Adèle Cassola
International Journal of Educational Development Volume 39, Number 1, ISSN 0738-0593 Publisher: Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
This article assesses the status and evolution of education rights in 191 constitutions and analyzes their relationship to educational policies and enrolment rates. As of 2011, 81% of constitutions protected primary education universally and 53% designated it as free. A minority granted secondary (37%) and higher (35%) education or explicitly protected specific groups. Constitutions adopted after 1990, which belong predominantly to low- and middle-income countries, were more likely to protect education rights. Countries that constitutionally protected free education were more likely to have corresponding national policies. Those that constitutionally guaranteed primary and secondary education had significantly higher net enrolment, independent of GDP and urbanization.
Citation
Heymann, J., Raub, A. & Cassola, A. (2014). Constitutional rights to education and their relationship to national policy and school enrolment. International Journal of Educational Development, 39(1), 121-131. Elsevier Ltd. Retrieved March 22, 2023 from https://www.learntechlib.org/p/196589/.
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International Journal of Educational Development
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International Journal of Educational Development is a publication of Elsevier.