Description:
This volume examines how Governmental agencies, non-profit organizations and educational institutions are mobilizing their resources to promote inclusion of refugees and internally displaced people. It explores the grass root campaigns that are working towards participation and full involvement for disadvantaged groups, and towards equitable distribution of opportunities in both home and host countries. The case studies included emphasize the importance of effective cooperation and coordination across multi-sectoral responses, and the need to take into account the social and economic dimensions of inclusion.
Providing educators at all levels with a research and evidence based understanding of the educational opportunities and challenges facing refugees (both children and adults), this important book considers related and overlapping issues such as equality, equity, power, privilege, identity, rights, and pluralism, and addresses the relevant issues at the theory, policy, and practice levels.
Review Quotes: Education scholars, development workers, and other social scientists present case studies of educationists and non-government organizations promoting education among refugees. Looking in turn at access to higher education and education toward career development, they consider such topics as access to and quality of higher education available to Syrian refugees in Jordan and Germany, disabled refugee students in Zimbabwe, the political economy of public higher education in Malawi: proposals for extending equitable higher education access to refugee applicants, business education to create livelihood among refugees and internally displaced people in the camps of Kurdistan, and from pipe dream to possibility: developing an equity target for refugees to study medicine in Australia.--Annotation (c)2018 "(protoview.com)"