In 2012, IJED published a special issue on vocational education and training and development that reflected the sense of being at a potential turning point for policy, practice and research in this area as UNESCO convened the Third International Conference on Technical and Vocational Education and Training. A decade on, we reflect on the way that the research literature has evolved in this period, suggesting a five-fold typology of literature that seeks to explore the VET-development relationship. First, we note that the vast majority of research published on VET in developing countries is practice-focused, concerned with improving classrooms, curricula and colleges, largely in the public sector. Whilst it considers VET in development conte...
Much of VET policy internationally draws on a toolkit that has been seriously questioned for its log...
Peru currently has a fragmented and incomplete approach to Vocational and Educational Training (VET)...
The SDGs mark the clearest global acceptance yet that the previous approach to development was unsus...
The current decade has seen a significant return of interest in vocational education and training (V...
Focusing on reimagining the purpose of vocational education and training (VET) and grounded in the r...
Editorial introduction to special issue on vocational education and training for development
The SDGs mark the clearest global acceptance yet that the previous approach to development was unsus...
This volume is intended to develop and share knowledge within the southern African region regarding ...
Economic Policy Forum Working Paper, MarchThis Policy Paper analyses the vocational education and tr...
ABSTRACT The article analyses the discourses underpinning formal vocational education and training (...
ABSTRACT The article focuses on how the present vocational education and training (VET) system in Au...
This article surveys the literature on skill formation and training, presenting arguments about the ...
This handbook brings together and promotes research on the area of vocational education and training...
This paper applies the capabilities approach to the broader debate of the r...
Historical approaches are not a major focus of contemporary VET research. When we launched the Call ...
Much of VET policy internationally draws on a toolkit that has been seriously questioned for its log...
Peru currently has a fragmented and incomplete approach to Vocational and Educational Training (VET)...
The SDGs mark the clearest global acceptance yet that the previous approach to development was unsus...
The current decade has seen a significant return of interest in vocational education and training (V...
Focusing on reimagining the purpose of vocational education and training (VET) and grounded in the r...
Editorial introduction to special issue on vocational education and training for development
The SDGs mark the clearest global acceptance yet that the previous approach to development was unsus...
This volume is intended to develop and share knowledge within the southern African region regarding ...
Economic Policy Forum Working Paper, MarchThis Policy Paper analyses the vocational education and tr...
ABSTRACT The article analyses the discourses underpinning formal vocational education and training (...
ABSTRACT The article focuses on how the present vocational education and training (VET) system in Au...
This article surveys the literature on skill formation and training, presenting arguments about the ...
This handbook brings together and promotes research on the area of vocational education and training...
This paper applies the capabilities approach to the broader debate of the r...
Historical approaches are not a major focus of contemporary VET research. When we launched the Call ...
Much of VET policy internationally draws on a toolkit that has been seriously questioned for its log...
Peru currently has a fragmented and incomplete approach to Vocational and Educational Training (VET)...
The SDGs mark the clearest global acceptance yet that the previous approach to development was unsus...