Education for Migrant, Minority and Marginalised Children in Europe

Date:
January 2008
Source:
Open Society Foundations
Author:
Tom Brind, Caroline Harper and Karen Moore

In 2007, the Open Society Institute Education Support Program launched the Education for Migrants, Minorities and Marginalized children in Europe (EMMME) project to investigate the impact of education on social inclusion and issues of injustice in education for migrant children in Europe. EMMME research and mapping suggests considerable and growing disparities in access to quality education and increasing segregation in European schools. During the course of the EMMME project, two separate but interlinked documents were produced:  Education for Migrant, Minority and Marginalized Children in Europe and Making the Mark? An Overview of Current Challenges in the Education for Migrant, Minority, and Marginalized Children in Europe.

Education for Migrant, Minority and Marginalized Children in Europe collates up-to-date evidence on the educational realities that confront migrants, minorities, and marginalized groups in the European Union. The report identifies policy responses, legislative frameworks and local initiatives that seek to improve the educational position of children from migrant and minority groups. The reviewed literature emanates primarily from four countries in which groups with a migrant background make up a significant proportion of the national and school-going populations: France, Germany, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom.

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Related Publication

Making the Mark? An Overview of Current Challenges in the Education for Migrant, Minority, and Marginalized Children in Europe
July 2008
This OSI paper explores the scope, nature, and causes of educational inequalities and exclusion, particularly in the first member states of the European Union.

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