Inclusion in
education is not just a result, it is a process ............................................... 17
The experiences of people with disabilities have helped shape
perspectives on inclusion ........................................................................................................18
Inclusion in education means education of good quality for all ..........................20
History has welded together national education experiences in Central and
Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia ................................................................. 21
Education systems in the region are trying to shed the legacy of the medical
model ................................................................................................................................................22
Systems in the region also need to address other types of exclusion ..............23
Why does inclusion in education matter? .............................................................................25
Guide to the report .......................................................................................................................... 26
A note on methodology .........................................................................................................27
Transforming our World,
the foundation document
of the 2030 Agenda
for Sustainable Development,
brought together aspirations of poverty reduction and
environmental sustainability, underpinned by a drive
for social justice that builds on the human rights
instruments of the past 70 years.
It refers extensively
to equity, inclusion, diversity, equal opportunity and
non-discrimination. It calls for empowering vulnerable
people and meeting their needs. Several of the
17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
refer to inclusion
and equality. SDG 4, the international community’s
commitment to ‘ensure inclusive and equitable quality
education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for
all’, has both at its heart and is one of the clearest examples
of the overall pledge to leave no one behind.
As unequal distribution of resources and opportunities
persists, equity and inclusion
have become the central
promises of the 2030 Agenda. Characteristics commonly
associated with inequality of distribution include gender,
remoteness, poverty, disability, ethnicity,
language,
migration, displacement, incarceration, sexual orientation,
gender identity and expression,
and religion and other
beliefs and attitudes.
Some mechanisms contributing to inequality are
universal while others are specific to social and economic
contexts, as in the case of Central and Eastern Europe, the
Caucasus and Central Asia. Advantage and disadvantage
are transmitted over generations
as parents impart
resources, including income, skills and networks, to their
children. Organizations and institutions may favour
some groups over others and propagate social norms
and stereotypes that exclude
more vulnerable groups
from opportunities. Individuals form groups that extend
advantage to members and deny it to others.
Public institutions may be designed to correct imbalances
or may be beholden to vested and powerful interests
(UNDP, 2019).
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