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Education, Children on the move and Inclusion in National Education Systems

Today, the world is facing compounding humanitarian, environmental and economic crises that have spurred the migration and displacement of millions of children and their families. The number of internally displaced children, refugees, migrants, and asylum seekers and in some cases, returnees, has grown dramatically and is only set to increase in the face of new and protracted conflicts and climate change.  Many of these children now also face the added challenge of recovering learning losses they have experienced as a result of the COVID-19 global pandemic, which has made worse an already dire learning crisis for children – especially those in low-income and fragile settings.

Working with governments, United Nations partners, the private sector and with civil society, UNICEF is supporting millions of refugee, IDP and migrant children access quality learning opportunities in host country education systems around the world.   This report identifies solutions that can rapidly be taken to scale and adapted to different contexts by governments and partners to support children on the move access learning opportunities. The report lists several lessons learned in overcoming key barriers experienced by children on the move with accessing quality learning drawing upon examples from 19 countries.

Date of Publication
Type of Resource
Target Audience
All
Source / Publisher
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)
Language
English
Geographic Scope
Global
Workstream Output
No
Regional Review Process
No
GCM Objectives
Cross Cutting Theme
Child-sensitive
SDGs
SDG.4 - Quality Education
Keywords
Child and young migrants
Education services and training opportunities
Status
Published

*References to Kosovo shall be understood to be in the context of United Nations Security Council resolution 1244 (1999).