Education of Syrian Refugee Children: Managing the Crisis in Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan

With four million Syrian refugees as of September 2015, there is urgent need to develop both short-term and long-term approaches to providing education for the children of this population. This report reviews Syrian refugee education for children in the three neighboring countries with the largest population of refugees — Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan — and analyzes four areas: access, management, society, and quality. Policy implications include prioritizing the urgent need to increase access to education among refugees; transitioning from a short-term humanitarian response to a longer-term development response; investing in both government capacity to provide education and in formal, quality alternatives to the public school systems; improving data in support of decisionmaking; developing a deliberative strategy about how to integrate or separate Syrian and host-country children in schools to promote social cohesion; limiting child labor and enabling education by creating employment policies for adults; and implementing particular steps to improve quality of education for both refugees and citizens.

Información sobre el recurso

Tipo de recurso

Report

Publicado

Publicado por

RAND Corporation

Escrito por

Shelly Culbertson, Louay Constant

Tema(s)

Refugees
Right to Education

Enfoque geográfico

Jordan
Lebanon
Syria
Türkiye