School Uniform Policy’s Adverse Impact on Equity and Access to Schooling

Research on the effect of school uniforms on school attendance in low income countries is scarce. Building on a meta-analysis of the available literature, this paper analyses primary survey data collected (n = 462) in Mongolia on students’ perceptions of school uniforms. The findings reveal that it is not only the cost of uniforms that matters, but also poor students’ feelings of exclusion when the majority of students in a school wear uniforms. The poor drop out from school when their symbolic association with the majority is visibly broken through their inability to afford and wear school uniforms. The study suggests that school uniform policies in low income countries are fraught with complications.


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Providing Equity of Access to Higher Education in Indonesia: A Policy Evaluation

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Role of Education in Financial Inclusion of Poor and Unbanked Women in India