“…However, a review of the recommendations and results within 155 research reports on absenteeism from a number of different countries published during the 21 st century, shows that most studies continue to focus on individual factors (Ekstrand 2015). Although several studies (see for example Reid 1999;Corville-Smith et al 1998;Weinberg & Weinberg 1992) highlight the importance of understanding school absenteeism as a complex, multi-faceted or 'multifactorial' problem consisting of a combination of background factors (such as family relations, socioeconomic variables, residential areas, and gender; see for example Arthur 2015), 'personality' (such as school phobia, learning disabilities, poor school performance; see Sutphen, Ford & Flaherty 2010) and school context (see Sälzer et al 2012), I would -like Corville-Smith et al (1998) and Sutphen, Ford and Flaherty (2010) -argue that research on school absenteeism tends to focus on only one of these many aspects at a time. With the intention of not (re)producing this separation, that according to Sutphen, Ford and Flaherty (2010) has significant impacts on truancy interventions, I weave together in the following studies focusing on individual factors, background factors (that have somewhat also an individual focus) and studies focusing on structural or school related explanations.…”