糖心Vlog

Work together to ensure refugees can access HE, UN adviser says

Refugee participation in tertiary education rises from 1 to 6 per cent in four years but much more needs to be done, congress hears

Published on
May 31, 2023
Last updated
June 27, 2023
Source: Helmy H. Alsagaff

The international community needs to coordinate better and act more coherently to ensure more refugees are able to attend universities, according to a聽senior United Nations adviser.

Khaled Khalifa, who represents the UN鈥檚 refugee agency to countries in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), said the world was at risk of missing its target of ensuring 15聽per cent of refugees are in higher education by 2030 unless institutions work together.

More coordination was key to ensuring progress across all the UN鈥檚 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Mr Khalifa told 糖心Vlog鈥檚 , hosted by King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia. 鈥淚f we move as we are moving now, I tell you honestly we will never meet the SDGs,鈥 he said.

The targets include increased participation of women in higher education, more scholarships for students from poorer countries and raising the number of qualified teachers, among others.

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To achieve the goal on refugees, the world needs to learn the lessons of recent years, which have seen refugee participation in tertiary education rise from 1 per cent in 2019 to 6 per cent in 2023, Mr Khalifa added.

Many refugees are displaced to poor countries with few resources to improve their access to universities, meaning wealthier countries need to work together to share the burden, Mr Khalifa said. He noted that countries in the GCC, which includes all the Arabian Peninsula except Yemen, 鈥渉ave many large education institutes鈥 but they are 鈥渨orking in solitude鈥 when it comes to refugee access.

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the number of refugees at universities in the Middle East and North Africa has risen from a few hundred in 2015 to almost 7,000 in 2021.

鈥淲e need somehow to build a network for good in the education system to make sure all the big organisations that are in the region here are cooperating towards the same goal,鈥 he said. While he called for 鈥渃oncerted efforts鈥 from the mostly Sunni Muslim, oil-rich monarchies, he noted that access alone would not be enough to give refugees equal treatment in many host countries.

鈥淚t will be very naive to think that the education of refugees can actually prepare them for equal opportunities at life. Either their certificates are not acknowledged where they are because they travelled from places where the education was in a different language, or they do not have the documentation in the first place,鈥 he said, giving the example of the Rohingya, an ethnic group that fled from Myanmar to Bangladesh to escape genocide, many of whom left on foot with little warning.

He said host countries鈥 investment in refugee education would benefit students and wider society, because refugee graduates would help economic growth. At the same time, higher education would boost the 鈥渕orale鈥 of displaced people who often lose some sense of their own identity.

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Those trapped in camps without a way to study towards a better future could become a problem for their hosts, he added. 鈥淚f we do not invest in education and give some hope to young people it is actually a time bomb.鈥

UN member states will meet in New York in September to take stock of progress on the SDGs, including those on refugee education, while the Global Refugee Forum in December will offer a similar opportunity in Geneva, Mr Khalifa said.

ben.upton@timeshighereducation.com

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