ABSTRACT
While the number of refugees in tertiary education remains small in comparison to the total number of refugee youths, with 1% of university-students worldwide, their social, economic and political impact in refugee societies is believed to be significant. Yet, the role of higher education in their socialisation, the way humanitarian actors invest in the field of higher education with specific agendas in mind and the ways that these young scholars position themselves in relation to these policies and discourses have remained largely unexplored. Focusing on Congolese refugees studying at a Rwandan University and supported by the world’s largest academic scholarship programme funded and administrated by a UN agency, this paper aims to contribute to a better understanding of how students negotiate their identities as ‘highly educated persons’. The analysis draws on various forms of what the humanitarian rhetoric calls ‘community-based investment’ with which students engage in the public space of the camps during summer or semester breaks. The different types of engagement that are discussed in this paper serve as a case study to examine how different understandings and perceptions of ‘becoming an intellectual’ coexist in individuals’ minds, according to the different political subjectivities and regimes they navigate in.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Notes
1 In this paper, all names have been changed to protect respondents anonymity.
2 Only students with the best marks were sponsored to pursue their upper secondary education in Rwandan boarding schools.
3 Human beings who cross a border and are granted refugee status by UNHCR are legally not supposed to cross frontiers, although this is a recurrent practice in many parts of the world.