From refugees to citizens? How refugee youth in the Dadaab camps of Kenya use education to challenge their status as non-citizens

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The Dadaab camps of Kenya have ‘warehoused’ refugees from Somalia and elsewhere since 1991, providing their inhabitants with little hope to (re)gain the legal rights, participation, and membership that citizenship provides. Refugee youth in Dadaab hope that education can enable their access to citizenship rights—in particular, physical mobility and the right to work. Drawing on ethnographic research, semi-structured interviews, and life history interviews conducted in Dadaab and Mogadishu, this article discusses how refugee youth from Dadaab attempt to challenge their status as non-citizens through secondary education. Our study underscores that achieving citizenship rights, as well as civic participation and belonging, are key aspirations for these young people independent of whether they remain in Dadaab or (re)turn to Mogadishu. Yet, their ideas about what these key aspects of citizenship are and how to achieve them shift with their geographical location and in the presence or absence of citizenship rights.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Refugee Studies
Volume36
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)736-755
Number of pages20
ISSN0951-6328
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
©The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press.

    Research areas

  • camps, citizenship, education, Kenya, return, Somalia

ID: 389662828