000 01469naa a2200217uu 4500
001 1110119084541
003 OSt
005 20190211180047.0
008 111101s2005 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 eng d
100 1 _aPHELPS, N. A
_945823
245 1 0 _aStealing the skills agenda? Devolution, business and post-16 education and training in Wales
260 _aUK :
_bPolicy Press,
_coct. 2005
520 3 _aThis article considers the role of business interests within the devolved political and governmental arrangements introduced by New Labour. We focus on the involvement of business in shaping post-16 education and training policy in Wales. Continuities apparent in the process of devolution across its administrative and political forms have produced a distinctive Welsh political economy involving public sector-dominated policy agendas periodically punctured by specific business interests. Devolution appears to have underlined such continuities. An increased imperviousness of public sector-dominated post-16 education and training strategy-making to business interests coexists with the ability of specific business interests to distort such strategies at an operational level
651 4 _aChina
_913345
700 1 _aVALLER, D. C
_945824
700 1 _aWOOD, A
_945825
773 0 8 _tPolicy & Politics
_g33, 4, p. 559-579
_dUK : Policy Press, oct. 2005
_xISSN 03055736
_w
942 _cS
998 _a20111101
_b1908^b
_cGeisneer
998 _a20111103
_b1520^b
_cGeisneer
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c40858
_d40858
041 _aeng