Various studies have shown that poor households with economic disruption have to choose their priorities. In such circumstances, expenses on girls' education tend to be sacrificed. On the other hand, the emergence of public policies which discriminate against women and minority groups threatens to reduce women's educational participation due to the psychological pressure and stigma they experience in educational institutions. This phenomenon is part of the reason why women's educational participation in Indonesia is lower than men. This research applied a mix of quantitative and qualitative methods to investigate and compare the impact of discriminative policies and economic conditions on women's education. Quantitative methods were conduct...