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Browsing by Subject "politiikka"

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  • Lahdenperä-Laine, Jaana (2020)
    PM Sipilä’s government limited the children´s subjective right to ECE to 20 hours per week when one of the child’s parents was not working. The government bill was accepted by the parliament in December 2015, and the changes came into force on the 1st of August 2016. The aim of this research project is to explore the meanings and parlances used in committee reports to contest the government proposal. Further objectives are to recognise which groups of people form adversaries relating to matters in the context of limiting accessibility to ECE. This research also pursues to bring forth and interpret assumptions relating to the aforementioned matters in the committee reports. The research material used in this research project consists of committee reports requested by PM Sipilä’s government, regarding the alteration of the subjective right for ECE. 36 reports were analysed. The theoretical background for this research relies on Carol Bacch’s (2009) approach (What’s the problem represented to be?), which allows a problem-oriented examination of politics. The WPR approach relies on Michel Focault’s (1926-1984) post-structural analysis. The research material in this re-search project was analysed using discourse analysis. The problem with limiting access to ECE was seen as weakening varied societal purposes of the service. Impairments were identified to affect especially social policy, labour market policy and family policy. The research material contained descriptions of the decline of participants in ECE, which goes against the recommendations of the OECD, the UN, and the World Bank. Also, it was perceived that the amount of work would in-crease on the grassroot level. Adversary was detected in the research material between full-time care and part-time care, as well as the home and day care environments. The right to full-time ECE was defended by the need for the service in different minority groups, such as immigrants and single parents. The examination of the committee reports indicated that the parlances used to discuss ECE and the right to participate in the service provide repetition and tension that can be traces back in history to the very beginning of day care services. Based on the research materials it can be stated that Finnish family policy appears strongly in ECE. Child and education policy require broader discussion on the effect of the parents’ choice in the context of their child’s participation in ECE.
  • Kallunki, Jarmo (2015)
    The subject of this study is the historical formation of the university funding formula in Finland during 1995–2010. Funding formula is approached via its historical context, and the aim of this study is to discover and construct regularities that enable and restrict the formation of the funding formula. The main foci of this study are the funding formula, and its components the funding criteria. The primary research material of this study consists of memoranda and decrees of the Ministry of Education in 1995–2006, and legislative material from the university reform in 2007–2010. The frame of this research is built by combining Kari Palonen's topological conception of politics on one hand, and the Foucauldian genealogical-archaeological discourse analysis on the other. Following Palonen, politics is conceptualised here both as activity, and as a sphere borne out of that activity, which can be analysed from nine different perspectives (topos). Discursive formation is conceptualised as set of objects, subjects, concepts, and strategies that are connected to each other by discursive regularities. This study creates a description of a discursive formation, in which and under who's conditions the university funding formula and funding criteria are formulated. The result of this study is extensive and detailed description of the discursive formation. As results it is asserted that there are five discursive regularities that govern the formation of funding criteria: the conflict between the funding model politics and general university politics, policy, internal variation, conceptual changes, and functional extension. The formation of the system of subjects is governed by the relationship between the universities and the Ministry of education. Concepts emerge as a result of a regularity called borrowing, and concepts fade away as soon as they are unneeded. Two strategies, the funding model politics and the general university politics, emerge by the support of the system of subjects, and a third strategy emerges as a conflict zone of the two, functioning as a conflict mediator.