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Halász, Gábor – European Journal of Education, 2015
This article evaluates the outcomes of the efforts of Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries to make their education systems more effective in enhancing broader social and economic goals. It focuses on those 11 Central and Eastern European countries which became members of the EU in 2004 or following this date. First, it presents a short…
Descriptors: Social Change, Educational Change, Social Systems, Foreign Countries
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Latova, Natalia V.; Savinkov, Vladimir I. – European Journal of Education, 2012
The emigration of highly-qualified academics ("brain drain") is considered an essential factor in the decline of the human capital of post-Soviet Russia. However, statistics show that the scale of this phenomenon since 2000 was minor. The Russian scientists who went abroad for permanent residence or for a contract job abroad represented…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Human Capital, Brain
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Reisz, Robert D.; Stock, Manfred – European Journal of Education, 2012
In Western Europe, especially in Germany, private higher education is generally perceived as an alternative to public higher education for students from relatively affluent families; more broadly, there is a general perception that attending a private higher education institution is correlated to wealth. This perception is influenced by private…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Private Colleges
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Mok, Ka Ho – European Journal of Education, 2012
In the last few decades, in the wake of three major crises in political faith and the overall instability that followed the end of the Cultural Revolution, the post-Mao Chinese government has sought to improve the lives of its citizens and to restore political legitimacy through rapid economic growth that has focused almost exclusively on GDP.…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Higher Education, Housing, Educational Change
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Schwabe, Markus – European Journal of Education, 2011
Economists and policy makers often emphasise the importance of human capital as a key determinant in the pursuit of economic growth. The highest formal qualification in the educational system is the doctorate, which is attained after the first stage of tertiary education at ISCED 6 level. Doctorate holders play a central role in research and…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Graduate Study, Human Capital, Labor Market
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Ding, Xiaohao; Yue, Changjun; Sun, Yuze – European Journal of Education, 2009
The entry of China in the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001 holds a number of promises for educational services. The purpose of this article is to explore both the direct and the indirect influence of China's entry into WTO on its education system. The direct influence mainly refers to the increase in the demand for education overseas and in…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Economic Progress, Educational Finance, Industrial Structure
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Sahlberg, Pasi; Oldroyd, David – European Journal of Education, 2010
Accelerating threats to a sustainable relationship between economic growth and the capacity of the global social-ecological system to support it require that the implications of competitiveness be reassessed. Today, the capacities that underlie economic competitiveness must also be brought to bear on policy and pedagogy to prepare the coming…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Sustainable Development, Teaching Methods, Competition
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Piazza, Roberta – European Journal of Education, 2010
Economic growth is stimulated through learning. In "the learning economies" of those European regions that chose to develop their human and intellectual capital wisely, benefits have been visible. But this is a one-dimensional outlook in a multi-dimensional world. A "Learning Region" is an entirely different entity, pooling and…
Descriptors: Economic Progress, Lifelong Learning, Educational Innovation, Barriers
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Dion, David-Pascal – European Journal of Education, 2005
This article deals with the process in the field of education and training that the European Union has put forward to tackle the main challenges it is facing: globalisation, ageing and the ICT revolution. In order to take advantage of the opportunities brought by these three forces and to counteract their potential negative impact, the European…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Human Capital, Human Resources, Economic Progress
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Jones, Hywel Ceri – European Journal of Education, 2005
This article traces the Lisbon strategy back to the White Paper issued by President Jacques Delors in 1993 on "Growth, Competitiveness, and Jobs" as the launching point for the structural reform agenda needed to turn around the massive unemployment crisis and proposing a combination of policies for the structural reform of the labour…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Labor Market, Human Capital
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Silber, Jacques; Berrebi, Z. M. – European Journal of Education, 1985
A study of the Israeli labor market examined the relationships between earnings, educational level attained, and three kinds of mobility (occupational, geographic, and inter-firm) among high school and college graduates. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Graduates, Comparative Analysis, Economic Progress, Educational Attainment