and in piloting models for inclusive education in education
institutions. Depending on the outcomes of such models,
the legislation and documents that define inclusion
policies are amended. In Montenegro, cooperation with
NGOs is mostly on a project basis rather than through
long-term commitment to include them in decision
making and governance.
In yet other countries, there is almost no collaboration
with NGOs in governance. The Belarus alternative report
on implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the
Child states that legislation revision often happens behind
closed doors and is not open to civil society organizations.
In Hungary, NGO involvement in strategy making is
limited. NGO representatives sometimes participate,
as invited guests, in advisory bodies established by
the government.
International organizations play a key role in
inclusive education provision
International organizations can influence the setting of
the inclusive agenda at a more advanced level than local
associations. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, the concept of
inclusive education was introduced in Education Reform
Strategy: Five Pledges on Education, a document of the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe that
later became the basis for policies, laws and regulations
in education.
In conjunction with the EU Structural Reform Support
Programme, Lithuania has formed a working group with
representatives from disabled people’s organizations,
education support specialist associations, school
associations, municipal associations and the Ombudsman
for Children, along with researchers. The group will make
suggestions for improving the action plan for children’s
inclusion in learning and multidisciplinary education.
In North Macedonia, representatives of UNICEF, the
US Agency for International Development (USAID) and
the Macedonian Civic Education Center were involved
in drafting the new Law on Primary Education and
the Law on Teachers and Associates in Primary and
Secondary Education, as well as bylaws derived from
them. The legislation provides for major changes in
inclusive education.
In Turkey, international organizations’ involvement in
funding refugee education has led to improvement in
the quality of data collected. Such examples suggest
that, increasingly, these stakeholders have a strong
positive impact on the decision-making process and the
transparency of inclusive education governance.
International organizations can influence
the setting of the inclusive agenda
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