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Législations et politiques nationales sur la scolarité payante ou gratuite – Turkey

Le fait que l'éducation délivrée par l’Etat soit gratuite ou payante n’est pas anodin. Tous les pays du monde ont signé au moins un traité international les obligeant à délivrer une éducation primaire gratuite et obligatoire, suivie progressivement par l’enseignement secondaire. L’éducation ne peut pas être obligatoire si elle n’est pas gratuite, mais cette contradiction est trop souvent ignorée. De plus, que signifie exactement la gratuité dans un monde où les apprenants, les parents et les communautés locales supportent une multitude de coûts officiels ou déguisés ? Une enquête de Katarina Tomasevski en 2006 montrait que dans la grande majorité des pays à travers le globe, l’éducation n’était pas réellement gratuite. Les citations concernant votre pays ci-dessous (selon la disponibilité des données) sont extraites de cette importante étude.

 

Les lois et les politiques nationales sont des applications de la Constitution, qu’elles devancent parfois car elles sont plus souvent révisées et renouvelées. Les lois sont faites par le gouvernement, les parlementaires et l’administration, souvent en consultation avec la société civile. Cela les rend vulnérables et soumises à un risque de régression dans la mesure où elles deviennent souvent des instruments au service de visions politiques et de priorités à court terme. Les lois et les politiques sont ouvertes au changement et à l’influence par le biais du processus démocratique et des campagnes de la société civile. Et leurs violations doivent, si possible, être dénoncées devant les tribunaux ou les autorités judiciaires.

 

 

 

 

L’Etat est l’acteur central de toute réclamation relative au droit à l'éducation, il est le premier responsable de sa délivrance, le premier à le mettre en œuvre, le premier garant, le signataire vis-à-vis des normes et des standards internationaux, et il est lié par l’obligation de respecter, protéger et mettre en œuvre le droit à l'éducation. C’est en conséquence l’Etat qui doit être jugé et questionné sur les textes relatifs au droit à l’éducation, qu’il s’agisse de la Constitution, de lois ou de stratégies politiques.

Turkey is in many ways a bridge between Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Its pending application for membership in the European Union leaves a decision whether it will ultimately classified as a European or an Asian country for the future. The opening sentence of Turkeys initial report under the Convention on the Rights of the Child has emphasized that Turkey is a European, Balkan, Caucasian, Middle Eastern, Mediterranean and Black Sea State all at once”. This pivotal geographical position has contributed to the diversity of Turkeys population. It was perhaps to counter this diversity that a unitary, centralized, secular state structure was established and a homogenous citizenry envisaged. Much as everywhere else, education was seen as the key for creating such a homogeneous citizenry. Thus, minority rights remain a contentious issue and a very recognition by the government that minorities exist, the Kurds in particular, and that they should be entitled to minority rights creates endless controversies.

 

In 2004, for the first time in Turkey, governmental budgetary allocations to education exceeded its military expenditure. Military expenditure had proverbially taken precedence over all other budgetary items and it was for a long time exempt from public scrutiny.

 

The shift from prioritizing investment in education over military expenditure in 2004 was, thus, a newsworthy item. The need to review and curtail military expenditure because of its high opportunity cost for development was prioritized in the mid-1990s by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. Their pledge fell into oblivion although the human rights impact of the influence of the armed forces in Turkeys education is considerable, albeit also exempt from public scrutiny. Turkeys many reforms aimed at meeting the European Unions conditions for a beginning of the negotiations leading towards membership in the EU have had beneficial effects in terms of reducing military expenditure as well as making it gradually less un-transparent than it had used to be.

 

In its reports under human rights treaties, the government claims that primary education is free and has done so for a long time. Other governmental reports contradict that assertion. In a report to the Council of Europe, the government has acknowledged that some school equipment and materials are paid for by parent-teacher associations” while the full costs of school meals and transportation have to be paid by the parents. It has added that formally schools are prohibited from receiving funds directly from parents,” but this can be done on an informal basis.

 

The reason for levying formal and informal charges in education was its expansion without a corresponding increase in the budgetary allocations. They actually decreased in the 1990s  although the number of children at school increased almost by half, from 11 to 15 million.  Turkeys population is young, almost one third are school-going children, and this necessitates a huge increase in budgetary allocations to education. The European Union has prioritized it within the conditions for Turkeys commencement of negotiations for an eventual membership in the EU.Also, in its first National Programme for the Adoption of the Acquis comunaitaire (NPAA), Turkey committed itself to increase the length of compulsory education to 12 years by 2005. This was not accomplished. An important reason is that free education has not yet been guaranteed even for the first eight years of schooling.

 

Comparative studies of educational accomplishments in the OECD countries routinely locate Turkey at the bottom, regardless of the yardstick used, and this underlines the priority for a comprehensive education strategy and for elevating the priority of education in budgetary allocations. Accurate statistics on the numbers of children who should be at school are the first step towards such a strategy. There is, however, an abyss between the officially reported statistics and the findings of international agencies on the numbers of out-of-school children.

 

The Education for All (EFA) 2000 Assessment reported the enrolments in primary school at 87.5% but, as a consequence of the prolongation of compulsory education to eight years in 1997, enrolments decreased. The Ministry of Education subsequently reported an enrollment ratio of 97.6 per cent in primary education, but the EFA 2006 Report lowered that to 86%.

 

Moreover, the government has acknowledged that there are children who do not have an identity card and those who are not registered on the civil registries. There is no authoritative information on the numbers of children who cannot claim their rights because they do not exist due to the lack of identity documents. The Common Country Assessment (CCA) by the United Nations agencies in Turkey has singled out the gaps in official statistics:

 

Turkey lacks reliable information on a number of areas. To begin with, due to the current state of the birth registration system, the annual number of births is not known. There is no recording system for disabled children.

 

The UNESCO/UNICEFs research into the number of out-of-school children has found that one-third of the regions out-of-school children are in Turkey. This demonstrates that Turkey remains far from ensuring primary education for all.