New article by Jörg Markowitsch (3s), Bernd Käpplinger and Günter Hefler (3s) – published in the European Journal of Education – Special Issue: Adult Learning Systems in a Comparative Perspective
This article addresses cross-country and cross-period differences in average levels of training activity from an institutional perspective. Firm-provided training in Europe between 1999 and 2010 is scrutinized in order to explore whether diverse institutional arrangements that can be linked to welfare state regimes can yield discernible cross-country patterns. An emphasis is placed on the limits of national skills strategies that are not well embedded in wider institutional environments. This is grounded in a view that policy efforts to influence training activity, involves nothing less than ‘reforming’ societies. Insights of this research should contribute both to a critical reflection of the EU’s targets in the field of lifelong learning as well as supporting policy learning between member states.
Markowitsch, J., Käpplinger, B. and Hefler, G. (2013), Firm-provided Training in Europe and the Limits of National Skills Strategies. European Journal of Education, 48: 281–291. doi: 10.1111/ejed.12030