A new education law in Bosnia might please the country’s European neighbors, but critics say it only locks in a broken system.
SARAJEVO | The question of where the buck stops in Bosnia and Herzegovina’s education system isn’t easy to answer. The country has 14 ministries of education. There is one at the state level – technically in the Ministry of Civil Affairs – one in each of the country’s two entities, one in each of the 10 cantons, and one in the independent district of Brcko.
It’s a recipe for bureaucratic chaos that hinders growth, and it’s hardly what European powers hoped for when Bosnia joined 28 other countries in signing the Bologna accords in 2003. Reached in 1999, the accords aim to establish a European Higher Education Area with more or less uniform quality and degree-granting standards.