Journal on Education in Emergencies: Volume 4, Number 1

The Journal on Education in Emergencies aims to stimulate research and debate about education in emergencies; promote learning informed by evidence; define knowledge gaps and key trends for future research; and publish rigorous scholarly and practitioner work that will set standards for evidence in the field.

The fourth issue of the Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE) was published in August 2018. This exciting new issue of JEiE includes five research articles, one field note, and four book reviews. It features a diverse cohort of authors who employ a wide range of methodologies and disciplinary approaches. Three pieces shine new light on refugees’ experiences with education in kindergarten, in adolescence, and in higher education. A special sub-section on education administration in postconflict societies offers three articles that comment on reforms to education systems that are embedded in intrastate peace agreements, on policy transfer, and on the complex interrelationship between identity, ethnicity, and control over territory, and over education within a territory.

The full JEiE Volume 4, Number 1, as well as individual articles, can be downloaded by clicking on the titles below.

Creative CommonsThe Journal on Education in Emergencies, published by the Inter-agency Network for Education in Emergencies (INEE), is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Research Publication

Journal on Education in Emergencies: Volume 4, Number 1

Publié par
Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE)

We are delighted to present the fourth issue of the Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE). The five research articles and one field note featured in this issue coalesce around two main themes: refugee education and education administration in postconflict societies.

English
Journal Article

Pathways to Resilience in Risk-Laden Environments: A Case Study of Syrian Refugee Education in Lebanon

Publié par
Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE)

This qualitative study, which examines the experiences of Syrian refugee children who are attending a non-formal education center in Lebanon, seeks to understand the role education plays in fostering pathways to resilience in the children’s lives. Half of the students in the study had chosen to drop out of the Lebanese formal schools they attended.

English
Journal Article

Mapping the Relationship between Education Reform and Power-Sharing in and after Intrastate Peace Agreements: A Multi-Methods Study

Publié par
Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE)

To what extent does the adoption of consociational power-sharing affect the design and implementation of education reforms? This article maps this territory through rich and detailed interviews collected in Lebanon, Northern Ireland, and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia in 2012-2013.

English
Journal Article

Developing Social Cohesion through Schools in Northern Ireland and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia: A Study of Policy Transfer

Publié par
Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE)

In this article, we consider an example of policy transfer for another purpose: to promote social cohesion through schools, specifically in societies that have experienced ethnic division and conflict. Focusing on the model of shared education, we explore a process of policy transfer between Northern Ireland and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.

English
Journal Article

The Politics of Education in Iraq: The Influence of Territorial Dispute and Ethno-Politics on School in Kirkuk

Publié par
Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE)

The Iraqi Disputed Territories consist of 15 districts stretching across four northern governorates from the Syrian to Iranian borders. The oil-rich Iraqi governorate of Kirkuk lies at the heart of this dispute and reflects the country’s ethnic and religious diversity. This paper explores the influence of these conflicts and contests on education in the city of Kirkuk.

English
Journal Article

Book Review: Child Migration and Human Rights in a Global Age by Jacqueline Bhabha

Publié par
Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE)

Noting that this trend is likely to continue, that the issue of child migration is complex, and that children migrate for multiple reasons, Jacqueline Bhabha’s insightful and sobering reflection on this much-neglected issue in the global discourse goes far in shedding light on a “largely untold and unanalysed story”

English
Journal Article

Book Review: Youth in Postwar Guatemala: Education and Civic Identity in Transition by Michelle J. Bellino

Publié par
Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE)

In Youth in Postwar Guatemala: Education and Civic Identity in Transition, Michelle J. Bellino draws on 14 months of ethnographic fieldwork to examine the complexities that the historical memory of armed conflict offers for the consolidation of democracy and the expansion of citizenship among youth.

English