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Marxism, Socialism, and the Dutch Primary Schools
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
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In 1962, 26% of the elementary school pupils in the Netherlands attended a public school, 74% were in private or confessional schools. This has not always been the case. At the turn of the century 69% of all elementary school students were in public schools and 31% in private or confessional schools. One of the great turning points in this confessionalizing trend was the constitutional revision of 1917 which placed confessional elementary schools on a parity with the public schools in terms of state subsidy. The parliament which carried out constitutional revision was elected in 1913 and embodied 46 deputies in the clerical bloc, 38 in the liberal concentration and 16 social democrats, in the 100 seat lower house. The measure owed its passage to the social democrats who combined with the clerical bloc and some left-liberals to legislate a new school law. In 1902 the Sociaal Democratische Arbeiderspartij (SDAP), the recognized Dutch representative of the social democratic Second International, passed a resolution calling for state subsidy to confessional schools. Within the context of Dutch politics the 1902 resolution is important for two reasons. One, it laid down the guideline which the SDAP would follow until the dissolution of the party by German occupation authorities in 1940. After the Second World War a labor party, the Partij van de Arbeid (PvdA) was formed out of the ashes of the SDAP. The PvdA, acting as the logical successor of the SDAP, pursued, and continues to pursue, the policy of supporting state aid to confessional schools. In short, the labor community has aided in the confessionalizing trend by refusing to demand either a termination of aid to confessional schools or free compulsory state schools and a sharp, or total, curtailment of the existing confessional schools.
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1. See van Welderen, W. J. baron Rengers, Schets eener Parlementaire Geschiedenis van Nederland, Vol. IV: Nederland 1914–1918, by Vermeulen, W. H. Dr. (5 vols., 4th ed.; 's-Gravenhage. 1948–1956), pp. 142–185, for a brief survey of the politics of constitutional reform in 1917. The author would like to express his appreciation to his friend and colleague Professor David Potts and to Professor Val Lorwin of the University of Oregon, for their advice and criticism in the preparation of this essay.Google Scholar
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81. The SDAP delegates to the annual party congress were selected in the sections, however, little is known about the sections. As late as 1902, the SDAP commissioned the Socialist Reading Club at the University of Amsterdam to survey the sections and establish an accurate membership list. The SDAP at the grass roots during these formative years would be an attractive doctoral dissertation subject for a Dutch student. Little is known about the social composition of the party membership during this phase in its development.Google Scholar
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