EDUC 499: Greece - Summer 2019’s Updates

Refugee Crisis and Education

In an increasingly connected world the definition of citizenship is increasingly ambigious. Does it or rather should it refer to the legal citizens of each country, those who were born there? Those who speak the language? Those whose families have lived there? Anyone who lives within a country? Who is the state responsible for? Now more than ever there is a sense of global citizenship, a sense of belonging to the same human race. This notion contributes to the idea of human rights like education. Those who would once have been considered foreigners and as such not the responsibility of the state are now seen as some sort of citizen. Greek law insists that its schools be open to all people living inside their country regardless of official citizenship status even during an econonomic crisis.

Parallels do exist between the US's refugee/immigration situation and the refugee crisis occuring in Greece and Europe at large. Both nations are receiving a group of people with a distinct language, culture, and religion from the majority of the host country's population. Greece however is experiencing a significant economic crisis, is much smaller, and dealing with a far larger number of migrants relative to their total population. The sources we looked at portray the Greek people as being extremely open and welcoming of the refugees, but does mention a building resistance as the nation struggles to care for all of them. The narrative in the US is often less welcoming especially since President Trump came into office on a wave of "America first" sentiment. 

  • Phoebe Handler
  • Elizabeth Musgrove
  • Ashley Kaufman