Publisher's Synopsis
War and education may seem like contrasting forces-one destructive, the other constructive. Yet, throughout history, they have shared an uneasy and often tragic coexistence. In zones of conflict across the globe, from the ruins of Syria to the refugee camps in South Sudan, from post-war Bosnia to the occupied territories of Palestine, the pursuit of learning has been interrupted, reshaped, or altogether halted by the machinery of war. The cost is not merely measured in damaged buildings or displaced teachers, but in generations robbed of their right to grow, question, and thrive through education.
As an educationist and researcher with over three decades of experience, I have known how fragile educational systems can be in times of turmoil, and yet, how remarkably resilient they can also become. This duality-of destruction and resilience-is what inspired me to write War and Education. This book is not just an academic exercise; it is a call to conscience. It explores the multifaceted impacts of armed conflict on education systems, learners, teachers, policy environments, and societal values. It examines how war weaponizes curricula, destroys infrastructure, displaces students, and leaves psychological scars that extend far beyond the battlefield. It analyzes how ideologies infiltrate classrooms, how displaced children struggle to learn in alien environments, and how education itself becomes a site of resistance, hope, and eventual recovery.