TY - JOUR
T1 - Regional Policy Trajectories in the Spanish Education System
T2 - Different Uses of Relative Autonomy
AU - Bonal, Xavier
AU - Verger, Antoni
AU - Zancajo, Adrián
AU - Pagès, Marcel
PY - 2023/6/13
Y1 - 2023/6/13
N2 - Federal and highly decentralized political systems open different spaces to interpret, adapt, and enact international policy trends and ideas within the same territory. Spain, a country with a highly decentralized educational system and contentious territorial politics, is a very suitable case to analyze these dynamics. Spain and its different regions have not been immune to the influence of global policy ideas that gear around promoting private provision, school choice, and New Public Management (NPM) in education. However, the consolidation of the decentralization project, together with the fact that many regional governments have aimed to construct, for a variety of reasons, singular political profiles, have resulted in markedly different policy trajectories. To show this, this article pays particular attention to recent changes in the educational governance arrangements of two important Spanish regions, Madrid and Catalonia, as they have gone through differentiated processes of educational reform. Albeit the two regional education systems share important features (such as a historical and wide-scale public-private partnership for school provision), they have engaged with, combined, and mobilized exogenous and endogenous privatization policy ideas in remarkably different ways. The article delves into the political drivers behind this policy differentiation process by paying special attention to the relations of coordination, conflict, and competition that prevail within an incomplete federal system, such as the Spanish one.
AB - Federal and highly decentralized political systems open different spaces to interpret, adapt, and enact international policy trends and ideas within the same territory. Spain, a country with a highly decentralized educational system and contentious territorial politics, is a very suitable case to analyze these dynamics. Spain and its different regions have not been immune to the influence of global policy ideas that gear around promoting private provision, school choice, and New Public Management (NPM) in education. However, the consolidation of the decentralization project, together with the fact that many regional governments have aimed to construct, for a variety of reasons, singular political profiles, have resulted in markedly different policy trajectories. To show this, this article pays particular attention to recent changes in the educational governance arrangements of two important Spanish regions, Madrid and Catalonia, as they have gone through differentiated processes of educational reform. Albeit the two regional education systems share important features (such as a historical and wide-scale public-private partnership for school provision), they have engaged with, combined, and mobilized exogenous and endogenous privatization policy ideas in remarkably different ways. The article delves into the political drivers behind this policy differentiation process by paying special attention to the relations of coordination, conflict, and competition that prevail within an incomplete federal system, such as the Spanish one.
KW - quasi-federal system
KW - Catalonia
KW - school choice
KW - school governance
KW - Madrid
KW - education policy
KW - New Public Management
KW - federalism
KW - accountability
KW - school autonomy
KW - Spain
KW - política educativa
KW - Cataluña
KW - federalismo
KW - Madrid
KW - rendición de cuentas
KW - autonomía escolar
KW - España
KW - gobernanza escolar
KW - elección escolar
KW - Nueva Gestión Pública
KW - sistemas cuasi-federales
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85162808318&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/articulo?codigo=8981891
U2 - 10.14507/epaa.31.8031
DO - 10.14507/epaa.31.8031
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85162808318
SN - 1068-2341
VL - 31
JO - Education policy analysis archives
JF - Education policy analysis archives
IS - 68
M1 - 68
ER -