Volume 57, Issue 4 p. 291-309
Special Issue Article

Is the Education of Local Children Influenced by Living near a Refugee Camp? Evidence from Host Communities in Rwanda

Özge Bilgili,

Utrecht University, Netherlands

Search for more papers by this author
Craig Loschmann,

Maastricht University, Netherlands

Search for more papers by this author
Sonja Fransen,

University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

Search for more papers by this author
Melissa Siegel,

Utrecht University, Netherlands

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 02 January 2019
Citations: 4
The copyright line for this article was changed on February 21, 2019 and July 16, 2019 after original online publication.

Abstract

This article studies the extent to which educational services and schooling outcomes of local children are influenced by the presence of a refugee camp in or near their community. Investigating Congolese refugees in Rwanda and relying on a mixed-method approach, we examine schooling rates and access to school-based feeding programmes in communities closer to and further away from three refugee camps. We conduct cohort analyses to compare the schooling outcomes of Rwandans residing at different distances from each of these camps. Our results highlight that children residing closer to the camps have better schooling outcomes and that locals residing closer to the camps have mostly positive views regarding the effects of refugees on local education. These results contribute to the literature on the effects of refugees on host communities and inform policy debates on how refugees need not be a “burden” if a long-term vision shapes educational investments.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.