Early childhood education and care in Denmark: A Social Investment Success

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Early childhood education and care in Denmark : A Social Investment Success. / Larsen, Trine Pernille; de la Porte, Caroline Anne.

Successful Public Policy in the Nordic Countries. ed. / Caroline De a Porte; Guðný Björk Eydal; Jaakko Kauko; Daniel Nohrstedt; Paul 't Hart; Bent Sofus Tranøy. Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2022. p. 66-87.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Larsen, TP & de la Porte, CA 2022, Early childhood education and care in Denmark: A Social Investment Success. in C De a Porte, GB Eydal, J Kauko, D Nohrstedt, P 't Hart & BS Tranøy (eds), Successful Public Policy in the Nordic Countries. Oxford University Press, Oxford , pp. 66-87. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192856296.003.0004

APA

Larsen, T. P., & de la Porte, C. A. (2022). Early childhood education and care in Denmark: A Social Investment Success. In C. De a Porte, G. B. Eydal, J. Kauko, D. Nohrstedt, P. 't Hart, & B. S. Tranøy (Eds.), Successful Public Policy in the Nordic Countries (pp. 66-87). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192856296.003.0004

Vancouver

Larsen TP, de la Porte CA. Early childhood education and care in Denmark: A Social Investment Success. In De a Porte C, Eydal GB, Kauko J, Nohrstedt D, 't Hart P, Tranøy BS, editors, Successful Public Policy in the Nordic Countries. Oxford : Oxford University Press. 2022. p. 66-87 https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192856296.003.0004

Author

Larsen, Trine Pernille ; de la Porte, Caroline Anne. / Early childhood education and care in Denmark : A Social Investment Success. Successful Public Policy in the Nordic Countries. editor / Caroline De a Porte ; Guðný Björk Eydal ; Jaakko Kauko ; Daniel Nohrstedt ; Paul 't Hart ; Bent Sofus Tranøy. Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2022. pp. 66-87

Bibtex

@inbook{ff811b0e93c749eca380396317c2b079,
title = "Early childhood education and care in Denmark: A Social Investment Success",
abstract = "This study examines why Denmark is considered the leader among the Nordic countries and globally when it comes to childcare. In terms of programmatic success, Denmark is a pioneer in nationwide ECEC (early childhood education and care), including social investment, which focuses on learning capabilities and skills of children. The implementation of ECEC nationwide is well organized, and the take-up of ECEC is evenly spread geographically and across social classes. Danish ECEC is also a clear political success, as political parties from the left to the right of the political spectrum, and at central and local levels of government, have supported ECEC, from the 1970s onwards; furthermore, stakeholders have been involved in setting agendas for continued high-quality ECEC as part of Danish family-, childcare- and labour market policy. Linked to the political success, Danish ECEC has also been a clear process success, with incremental reforms by broad-based coalitions, which have been carried out without major obstacles. The Danish system of ECEC has endured over several decades, despite changes at the margin due to challenges, including financial crises. The endurance is likely to continue well into the future, because of the cap on parental own contribution to the costs of ECEC, and because there has been a political decision to have a minimum threshold for quality of care in 2019. Across both sides of the Atlantic, in the EU context and in the US, childcare in Denmark is considered as a poster-child.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, public policy, public administration, Nordic, reform, policy success, Nordic model, policy evaluation",
author = "Larsen, {Trine Pernille} and {de la Porte}, {Caroline Anne}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1093/oso/9780192856296.003.0004",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780192856296",
pages = "66--87",
editor = "{De a Porte}, {Caroline } and Eydal, {Gu{\dh}n{\'y} Bj{\"o}rk } and Kauko, {Jaakko } and Nohrstedt, {Daniel } and {'t Hart}, { Paul } and Tran{\o}y, {Bent Sofus }",
booktitle = "Successful Public Policy in the Nordic Countries",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Early childhood education and care in Denmark

T2 - A Social Investment Success

AU - Larsen, Trine Pernille

AU - de la Porte, Caroline Anne

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - This study examines why Denmark is considered the leader among the Nordic countries and globally when it comes to childcare. In terms of programmatic success, Denmark is a pioneer in nationwide ECEC (early childhood education and care), including social investment, which focuses on learning capabilities and skills of children. The implementation of ECEC nationwide is well organized, and the take-up of ECEC is evenly spread geographically and across social classes. Danish ECEC is also a clear political success, as political parties from the left to the right of the political spectrum, and at central and local levels of government, have supported ECEC, from the 1970s onwards; furthermore, stakeholders have been involved in setting agendas for continued high-quality ECEC as part of Danish family-, childcare- and labour market policy. Linked to the political success, Danish ECEC has also been a clear process success, with incremental reforms by broad-based coalitions, which have been carried out without major obstacles. The Danish system of ECEC has endured over several decades, despite changes at the margin due to challenges, including financial crises. The endurance is likely to continue well into the future, because of the cap on parental own contribution to the costs of ECEC, and because there has been a political decision to have a minimum threshold for quality of care in 2019. Across both sides of the Atlantic, in the EU context and in the US, childcare in Denmark is considered as a poster-child.

AB - This study examines why Denmark is considered the leader among the Nordic countries and globally when it comes to childcare. In terms of programmatic success, Denmark is a pioneer in nationwide ECEC (early childhood education and care), including social investment, which focuses on learning capabilities and skills of children. The implementation of ECEC nationwide is well organized, and the take-up of ECEC is evenly spread geographically and across social classes. Danish ECEC is also a clear political success, as political parties from the left to the right of the political spectrum, and at central and local levels of government, have supported ECEC, from the 1970s onwards; furthermore, stakeholders have been involved in setting agendas for continued high-quality ECEC as part of Danish family-, childcare- and labour market policy. Linked to the political success, Danish ECEC has also been a clear process success, with incremental reforms by broad-based coalitions, which have been carried out without major obstacles. The Danish system of ECEC has endured over several decades, despite changes at the margin due to challenges, including financial crises. The endurance is likely to continue well into the future, because of the cap on parental own contribution to the costs of ECEC, and because there has been a political decision to have a minimum threshold for quality of care in 2019. Across both sides of the Atlantic, in the EU context and in the US, childcare in Denmark is considered as a poster-child.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - public policy

KW - public administration

KW - Nordic

KW - reform

KW - policy success

KW - Nordic model

KW - policy evaluation

U2 - 10.1093/oso/9780192856296.003.0004

DO - 10.1093/oso/9780192856296.003.0004

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 9780192856296

SP - 66

EP - 87

BT - Successful Public Policy in the Nordic Countries

A2 - De a Porte, Caroline

A2 - Eydal, Guðný Björk

A2 - Kauko, Jaakko

A2 - Nohrstedt, Daniel

A2 - 't Hart, Paul

A2 - Tranøy, Bent Sofus

PB - Oxford University Press

CY - Oxford

ER -

ID: 323198348