Comparative Analysis of the impact of the Jomtien and Salamanca Declarations on National Education Policies
International Journal of Development Research
Comparative Analysis of the impact of the Jomtien and Salamanca Declarations on National Education Policies
Received 11th November, 2024; Received in revised form 16th December, 2024; Accepted 19th December, 2024; Published online 24th January, 2025
Copyright©2025, Rimmi Datta et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
This study presents a comparative analysis of the Salamanca Declaration (1994) and the Jomtien Declaration (1990), focusing on their respective influences on national education policies in five countries: In as much as the two indicators are concerned, the country that scored high was the European country, Canada and was followed by Spain, India, South Africa and Brazil. Policies towards the education of the disabled children have been advanced in the developed world also due to the Salamanca Declaration. On the other hand, the developing countries like India, Brazil and China still facing the same issues which are funding, infrastructure and lack of training for the teachers. Similarly, as the Jomtien Declaration which demand for enactment of primary education for all has made an influence in education all over the world. Some among them is the India’s: Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan and Brazil’s Bolsa Família, for which there has been expansion of enrolment and retention of school going children. However, one of the crucial areas of concern is the equity in the provision of quality education for all since an aspect that influences the implementation of improvement significantly is still problematic in that developed countries are highly affected with the majority of the developing countries being worst affected. These results point more seriously to long-term sustenance and commitment coupled with international cooperation and use of appropriate policies to eliminate such enduring problems. Thus, the following actions are needed to complete this SOC for socio-economic integration and enhance teachers’ quality to meet the visions of the equitable and quality BEC for every child, regardless their social classes or learners’ needs.