This book aims to enhance understanding of school choice as a supra-national travelling policy explored in two strikingly different societies: Latin American Chile and North European Finland. Chile was among the first countries to implement school choice as a policy which it did comprehensively in the early 1980s through the creation of a market environment. Finland introduced parental choice of a school on a very moderate scale and without the market elements in the mid-1990s. Predominant aspects of Chilean basic schooling include provision by for-profit and non-profit private and municipal organisations voucher system parental co-payment and ranking lists. Finland persists in keeping education under public-authority governance and free-of-charge and in prohibiting profit making and rankings.
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