Blog Special Issues
Reimagining a just early childhood education and care sector in England: Voices from the margins

This special issue arose from critical dialogue about injustice in the early childhood education and care (ECEC) sector in England between diverse people engaged in practice, research and advocacy. Each post makes visible the hidden injustices within the ECEC system and offers ideas for reform or action. In December 2023, the University of East London hosted the symposium Educating for Activism, which aimed to connect practitioners, campaigners and academics through knowledge exchange about structural injustice and activism in the ECEC sector in England. A collectively authored reflection on the symposium, published as a ½¿É«µ¼º½ Blog post, advocated for a just approach to knowledge exchange in the ECEC sector. As an action following the symposium, the contributors initiated a democratic dialogue connecting people and organisations on the margins of recent ECEC policy debates about to working parents.
In January 2025 a special issue of the ½¿É«µ¼º½ Blog focused on the action government needs to take to address inequality for children and families in the early years. Our special issue complements the earlier work by bringing to the foreground multiple experiences of injustice, and brings together ideas for reform from practitioners and campaigners working on the margins of the ECEC sector.
The contributions to this issue explore:Â
- reforms to employment rights and legal protections for migrant workers in the ECEC sector
- the challenges experienced by community-led and not-for-profit nurseries as they witness depleting numbers in the ECEC sector despite their vital role in supporting the local community
- how membership organisations such as the Early Years Alliance have a key role in connecting and representing marginalised voices in the sector
- challenges of recruitment and retention in the ECEC sector in England
- contemporary practice through a vignette to illustrate the multifaceted role of ECEC practitioners and day nurseries, underpinned by an ethic of care that encompasses the child and the child’s family
- how small independent nurseries are marginalised in the implementation of government plans to expand publicly funded childcare to babies by locating provision in primary schools
- past activism by nursery workers in Islington, London, to examine the impact of strike action which resulted in improved conditions for nursery workers, children and their families.Â
Editors
Editorial: Reimagining a just early childhood education and care sector in England: Voices from the margins
This special issue arose from critical dialogue about injustice in the early childhood education and care (ECEC) sector in England between diverse people engaged in practice, research and...
Unseen and undervalued: Recognising the role of nannies in education policy in England
Government policy for early childhood education and care (ECEC) in England often focuses on group-based settings such as nurseries (Penn, 2024). However, much childcare takes place within homes...
Community not-for-profit nurseries: An endangered species?
In this blog post, I explore the importance of community not-for-profit nurseries, their threatened demise and how they may be conserved. As I come to the end of leading an independent,...
Connected, valued and vocal: Early years educators advocate for the ECEC sector in public policy debates
In this third contribution to the special issue we consider the complex issue of early years educators’ (EYEs) professional voices being heard and acted upon in contemporary policy debates about...
Climbing the qualification ladder or leaving the profession: The crisis in early childhood work
A crisis exists relating to the status of qualifications and pay in the early childhood education and care (ECEC) workforce in England (Nutbrown, 2021) marked by both low pay and morale. In this...
‘Small things that no one sees’: Acts of advocacy in early childhood education and care
In this reflective blog post for this special issue, we draw on a vignette of the nursery practices that are everyday acts of advocacy. Our commentary foregrounds the unacknowledged labour of...
The complex problem of the education and care of babies: Could independent nurseries have the answer?
In this blog post, two managers of independent nurseries critically review the expansion of publicly funded childcare in England to include children aged nine months. Specifically, we examine the...
Connections across time: Activism as a nurturing network
We write as activists, advocates and historians about the ongoing impact of strike action taken by nursery workers 40 years ago and the way activism can nourish the profession. Despite the...
Content in this series
Editorial: Reimagining a just early childhood education and care sector in England: Voices from the margins
This special issue arose from critical dialogue about injustice in the early childhood education and care (ECEC) sector in England between diverse people engaged in practice, research and...
Continue reading blog postClimbing the qualification ladder or leaving the profession: The crisis in early childhood work
A crisis exists relating to the status of qualifications and pay in the early childhood education and care (ECEC) workforce in England (Nutbrown, 2021) marked by both low pay and morale. In this...
Continue reading blog postConnections across time: Activism as a nurturing network
We write as activists, advocates and historians about the ongoing impact of strike action taken by nursery workers 40 years ago and the way activism can nourish the profession. Despite the...
Continue reading blog postUnseen and undervalued: Recognising the role of nannies in education policy in England
Government policy for early childhood education and care (ECEC) in England often focuses on group-based settings such as nurseries (Penn, 2024). However, much childcare takes place within homes...
Continue reading blog postCommunity not-for-profit nurseries: An endangered species?
In this blog post, I explore the importance of community not-for-profit nurseries, their threatened demise and how they may be conserved. As I come to the end of leading an independent,...
Continue reading blog postConnected, valued and vocal: Early years educators advocate for the ECEC sector in public policy debates
In this third contribution to the special issue we consider the complex issue of early years educators’ (EYEs) professional voices being heard and acted upon in contemporary policy debates about...
Continue reading blog post‘Small things that no one sees’: Acts of advocacy in early childhood education and care
In this reflective blog post for this special issue, we draw on a vignette of the nursery practices that are everyday acts of advocacy. Our commentary foregrounds the unacknowledged labour of...
Continue reading blog postThe complex problem of the education and care of babies: Could independent nurseries have the answer?
In this blog post, two managers of independent nurseries critically review the expansion of publicly funded childcare in England to include children aged nine months. Specifically, we examine the...
Continue reading blog post