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Political Cultures in Parliamentary Systems

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Title: Political Cultures in Parliamentary Systems


1
Political Cultures in Parliamentary Systems
  • Mats Ekholm
  • Karen Seashore Louis
  • Boudewijn van Velzen

2
Our Question...
  • Does a countrys political culture explain how
    parliaments and elected officials have responded
    to calls for reform?

3
Methods
  • Comparative case study of three
    countriesEngland, the Netherlands and Sweden
  • Semi-structured interviews with 6-8 actors in the
    policy system
  • A focus the involvement and collaboration of key
    educational stakeholders

4
What Are The Issues?
  • Policy making initiatives shift, over time,
    between central governments and intermediate or
    local agencies.
  • The patchwork of local, municipal, and school
    board preferences are being challenged by
    national and international standards...

5
What is a Political Culture?
  • The traditional definition of political culture
    refers to enduring political attitudes and
    behaviors associated with groups that live in a
    defined geographical context (Elazar, 1970
    Lieske, 1993).
  • Culture affects political transformation by
    determining the context in which social actors
    make collective and individual political
    decisions (Berezin, 1997).
  • Political culture persists over time and affects
    how states address new issues (like educational
    accountability), as well as old issues (such as
    funding).

6
3 Basic Political Cultures
  • Traditional Policy is made by elites, with an
    emphasis on continuity and control limited
    inter-party competition
  • Individualistic Political arena is a
    marketplace policy determined by public demands
    high competition
  • Moralistic Emphasis on the broadest good for
    the public the common citizen is viewed as the
    primary actor

7
Political Culture Dimensions
  • Openness broad availability of political
    participation
  • Decentralism distributed power sources no one
    center
  • Rationalism policies based on logical/rational
    comprehensive solutions to problems
  • Egalitarianism policies redistribute resources
    to minimize disparities in finances and/or
    achievement
  • Efficiency economic cost-benefits and emphasis
    on returns for public investment optimization of
    policy performance
  • Quality focus on excellence and improvement as
    the major goal of educational policy
  • Choice range of options available opportunity
    to make policy decisions at multiple levels.

8
State Policy Levers/Instruments
  • Mandates laws, regulations, requirements,
    including sanctions
  • System Change restructuring, changing governance
    or legal/financial relationships, including
    choice options
  • Capacity professional development, providing
    information and/or data
  • Inducements grants programs, financial aid for
    special populations (McDonnell and Elmore, 1987)

9
TABLE 1 THREE POLITICAL CULTURES
10
TABLE 2 STATE POLICY LEVERS
11
ENGLAND A Traditional Political Culture
  • Key policy events
  • 1944 established separate secondary sector with
    differentiated streams and expanded the power of
    the Ministry
  • 1988 (Thatcher) further centralization of
    authority in the Ministry national curriculum
    and testing increased school choice
  • 1992 Establish OFSTED (non-ministerial
    inspection)
  • 1998 (Blair) Omnibus bill included provisions
    for attainment targets, key stages, and national
    literacy strategy
  • 2004 Joined up services for children, developed
    and delivered by local government

12
Continuity over 65 Years
  • Critical 1944 act passed under Tories Labour
    victory the next years involved no major changes.
  • I think that one of the best things Blair did
    was to design his education reform to build on
    the important Conservative reforms Michael
    Barber (http///www.educationsector.org/analysis/)

13
ENGLAND The Actors
  • Who is involved in shaping policy?
  • Relatively few people are involved in shaping the
    key features of each key policy
  • Key actors are increasingly non-elected policy
    advisors (Ministerial turnover)
  • Limited role of civil service, unions, public
  • How much influence do they have?
  • With increasing centralization and devolution of
    responsibilities outside the Ministrys civil
    service, wonks carry enormous influence
  • To be honest, I think that most key policies are
    seriously influenced by about 20 people
    (anonymous respondent).

14
ENGLANDState-School Relationships
  • What is the relationship between schools,
    municipalities/districts and the national
    government?
  • Major shift in 1944 that increased in 1988 with
    diminished role for LEAs and increased importance
    of school governing bodies
  • Joined up services requires collaboration among
    local agencies but does not challenge role of
    central government in setting policy

15
The NetherlandsAn Individualistic Political
Culture
  • Key Policy Events
  • 1917 Constitutional reform establishes freedom
    of education
  • 1975 Middle School and MAVO projects reform
    of middle schools
  • 1981 Basic education reform (merger of
    kindergarten and primary, fully implemented 1985
  • 1986 Establishment of support system
  • 1993 Basisvorming (bridge years between
    primary and lower secondary school)
  • 1993 Lump sum budgeting (very gradual
    implementation)
  • 1997 Tweede fase (reform of upper secondary)
  • Late 1990s Privatization of the support system
  • 2005 Government funds school board associations
    (MBO/VVO Raads) hoping for simplified
    consultation structure
  • 2008 Parliamentary report on the failures of
    Parliamentary reform initiatives (DIjsselbloem
    Report)

16
Incrementalism over 65 Years
  • Critical 1917 freedom of education act passed
    with support from most parties No significant
    challenges over the last century.
  • Parliamentary actions, since Minister van
    Kemenade (mid 1970s) chipped away at absolute
    school (board) autonomy
  • Cross-party emphasis on balancing privatization
    and central direction have conflicted

17
The Netherlands The Actors
  • Who is involved in shaping policy?
  • A large number of groups are involved in shaping
    the key features of each policy (permanent
    consultation overleg)
  • Key actors are often non-elected corporate groups
    (unions, student associations, school boards
    association, textbook publishers, etc.)
  • Limited role of civil service
  • How much influence do they have?
  • Many groups have potential influence and become
    involved when the issue seems relevant to their
    power and interests
  • When I work to create consensus around a new
    policy, there may be 500 people I need to consult
    with (anonymous respondent).

18
The NetherlandsState-School Relationships
  • What is the relationship between schools,
    municipalities/districts and the national
    government?
  • Major shift in 1917 that increased after 1993
    with stronger role for School Boards (70
    private).
  • Private School Boards have amalgamated more
    powerful and larger
  • Privatization of support services diminishes the
    governments ability to influence and steer
    semi-autonomous local schools
  • Increased influence over testing creates some
    curriculum coherence
  • Municipalities have a limited and conditions
    orientated responsibility.

19
SWEDEN A Moralistic Culture
  • Key policy events
  • 1950s The government invites Kommuns to
    experiment with different solutions on a
    comprehensive school system
  • 1962 The Grund school (age 7-16) is established
    followed by a Gymnasie school for all (age 17-19)
  • 1991 Kommuns fully responsible for both grund
    and gymnasie schools
  • 1998 The preschool system under the Ministry of
    Education
  • 2008 Third redesign of the National Agency for
    Education that was established in 1991

20
SWEDEN The Actors
  • Who is involved in shaping policy?
  • Ministers, active politicians in parliament,
    teacher and school leader union people, civil
    service people
  • Political parties have a strong position
  • How much influence do they have?
  • The decentralization that has taken place has
    created 290 political arenas instead of one.
    National politicians have got less influence, but
    when they make a change of the system it is
    effective (for instance the changed marking
    system in the grund school)

21
SWEDENState-School Relationships
  • What is the relationship between schools, kommuns
    and the national government?
  • From mid 1800 until 1980s the educational system
    was highly centralized. The state regulated most
    things very close.
  • From 1991the 290 kommuns are responsible for all
    educational questions within the grund school and
    gymnasie school system. But they have to follow
    the same central Läroplan, use the same marking
    scale and use national tests.
  • Free standing schools have become a common
    phenomena. In 1980 less than 1 of a year group
    went to this kind of school. In 2007 8 of the
    students in grund schools and 14 of the students
    in gymnasie schools went to free standing
    schools.

22
TABLE 1 THREE POLITICAL CULTURES
23
TABLE 2 STATE POLICY LEVERS
24
Discussion
  • Different countries are still variable in their
    attention to accountability and the specific
    policies that they enact.
  • The variability is better explained by continuity
    with previous patterns of government actions than
    by recent initiatives
  • Over the years the policies of different
    countries have a strong tendency to become more
    alike than different the role of co-operation
    within international organs like the EU and the
    OECD.
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