No Education, No Protection: What School Closures Under COVID-19 Mean for Children and Young People in Crisis-Affected Contexts
- Corporate Author
- Inter-agency Network for Education in Emergencies (INEE)Alliance for Child Protection in Humanitarian
- Collation
- 69 p.
- Resource Language
- English
- Year of publication
- 2021
- Topic
- Civic / Citizenship / DemocracyHuman rightsGlobalisation and social justice / International understandingDiversity / Cultural literacy / InclusivenessSustainable development / SustainabilityOthers
- Resource Type
- Research papers / journal articles
- Level of education
- Early childhood care and educationPrimary educationSecondary education
- Place of publication
- New York
Drawing from research and experience on previous infectious disease outbreaks and an emergent body of work from the current COVID-19 pandemic, this report highlights the primarily negative effects resulting from the combination of sudden school closures and restricted access to and availability of services, social networks, and other protective facilities for children and young people living in crisis-affected contexts. The consequences of school closures on education and child protection can be categorized into three principal areas:
1. Loss of learning and impediments to providing inclusive, equitable, quality education
2. Negative impact on child well-being and healthy development
3. Amplified child protection risks and harms experienced by children and young people

Confronting Inequality through GCED: Toward Justice, Inclusion, and Transformation (SangSaeng; No.65, 2025)
Educator's Guide to Global Citizenship Education from Asia-Pacific Perspectives
Supporting Change in Practice: Case Studies on the Use of the ACER-APCEIU Global Citizenship Education Monitoring Toolkit; Country Case-Australia
Supporting Change in Practice: Case Studies on the Use of the ACER-APCEIU Global Citizenship Education Monitoring Toolkit: Country Case-Republic of Korea