From Crisis to Continuity: Education as Care in Displacement and Refugee Resettlement
Abstract
Human mobility and migration have reached unprecedented levels, driven by protracted conflicts, environmental changes, and intensified globalization, significantly impacting the quality of education for millions of learners, who are forced to leave their homes, communities, and learning environments. Human mobility occurs both internally within a country and across borders. Forcibly displaced learners face intersecting challenges of loss, trauma, and instability. At the same time, the majority reside in low- and middle-income nations that shoulder the most significant responsibility for providing access to learning with limited resources. In these contexts, education is a means of survival and a bridge from crisis to continuity, offering psychosocial support, cultural and linguistic stability, and the hope of recovery. In connecting structural innovation to ethical responsibility, this work proposes education as care as a framework for restoring dignity, inclusion, and empowerment through ethically governed, trauma-sensitive, and culturally and historically sustaining systems of learning. This article explores how educators and policymakers can foster sustainable learning for displaced and resettled students by embracing innovation rooted in care, ethics, and equity. Drawing on relevant global research and field-based initiatives, this study explores educational practices in six conflict areas and six host contexts, concluding that when care, transparency, and ethical responsibility inform educational design, schooling becomes a moral act of restoration, solidarity, and human dignity.
Copyright (c) 2025 Rachid Bendraou, Dianala M Bernard

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Copyright for this article is retained by the author(s), with first publication rights granted to the journal. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).