Refugee Girls' Secondary Education in Ethiopia: Examining the Vulnerabilities of Refugees and Host Communities in Low-Resource Displacement Settings

Shelby Carvalho
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Refugee girls are one of the most marginalized groups in the world when it comes to school participation, and they are half as likely to enroll in secondary school as their male peers. Gender disparities can be made worse by conflict and displacement, and they often increase as children get older. As many low- and middle-income host countries move toward more inclusive models of refugee education, it's critical to identify barriers that may differentially limit the inclusion of refugee girls. I use two unique household surveys, conducted in Ethiopia, to examine the household and community factors that shape participation in secondary school. My findings suggest that the magnitude and sources of disadvantage vary across groups. Domestic responsibilities and concerns about safety in the community are more likely to limit secondary school participation for refugee girls than for refugee boys and host community girls. Other factors, including parental education and exposure to gender-based violence, are less likely to differ between refugee and host community girls. These findings have implications for education and social protection policies that target girls' education and wellbeing in both refugee and host communities.
埃塞俄比亚难民女童的中等教育:在资源匮乏的流离失所环境中审视难民和收容社区的脆弱性
在入学方面,难民女孩是世界上最边缘化的群体之一,她们进入中学的可能性只有同龄男性的一半。冲突和流离失所会加剧性别差异,而且往往随着儿童年龄的增长而加剧。随着许多低收入和中等收入收容国转向更具包容性的难民教育模式,确定可能以不同方式限制难民女孩融入的障碍至关重要。我使用了在埃塞俄比亚进行的两项独特的家庭调查,来研究影响中学入学率的家庭和社区因素。我的研究结果表明,劣势的程度和来源因群体而异。与难民男孩和收容社区女孩相比,家庭责任和对社区安全的担忧更有可能限制难民女孩参加中学教育。其他因素,包括父母的教育和遭受基于性别的暴力,在难民和收容社区女孩之间不太可能存在差异。这些发现对以难民和收容社区女童的教育和福祉为目标的教育和社会保护政策具有启示意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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