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The Dutch-speaking Society for Comparative Education (NGVO)

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Common Interests, Uncommon Goals

Part of the book series: CERC Studies in Comparative Education ((CERC,volume 21))

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When the Comparative Education Society in Europe (CESE) started in 1961, three scholars from the Low Countries [Netherlands and Belgium] participated as founding members: Philip Idenburg, Helena Stellwag, and Robert L. Plancke. Idenburg organised the first CESE conference in Amsterdam in 1963, and Plancke organised the third CESE conference in Ghent in 1967. It was the beginning of comparative education as an academic field in the rather small Dutch-speaking part of Western Europe.

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© 2008 Comparative Education Research Centre

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de Bunt-Kokhuis, S.v., Van daele, H. (2008). The Dutch-speaking Society for Comparative Education (NGVO). In: Masemann, V., Bray, M., Manzon, M. (eds) Common Interests, Uncommon Goals. CERC Studies in Comparative Education, vol 21. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6925-3_18

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