Since the late 1990s, the development and qualification of early childhood education in Europe have been directly linked to social investment welfare policies (Esping-Andersen 2002a, 2002b;Lister 2004;OECD 2011). In the wake of the European Union’s ‘Lisbon process’, early childhood and after-school care for children rapidly expanded in Luxembourg (Hartmann-Hirsch 2009, 2010) and have jointly evolved into an autonomous branch of the Luxembourg educational and social system. Following some rudimentary beginnings in the 1980s (Achten 2012; Achten et al. 2009; Marth and Ramponi 2009), the development of a publicly funded system of extrafamilial childcare was given an initial impulse by the European Employment Initiative of 1997. The present chapter argues that the significance gained by for-profit childcare in Luxembourg’s care system has resulted both from singular political decisions and from traditions in effect long-term (Penn 2011, 2013).
Early education and the unloved market of commercial childcare in Luxembourg
Suggested Citation
Honig, M.‑S., Schmitz, A. & Wiltzius, M. (2015). Early education and the unloved market of commercial childcare in Luxembourg. In H. Willekens, K. Scheiwe & K. Nawrotzki (Hrsg.), The development of early childhood education in Europe and North America: Historical and comparative perspectives (S. 254–274). Palgrave Macmillan.