This book discusses the educational systems into which students with
refugee backgrounds are placed when relocated into many of their new
homelands. It discusses the current climate of neo liberalism which
pervades schooling in many western countries and the subsequent impact
on curriculum focus and teaching strategies. It proposes ways in which
these students, who are currently the most vulnerable students in
school, can be educated with policies and perspectives which respect the
diversity and uniqueness that characterises the world today as the
result of the global unrest and subsequent diaspora. The impact of
power, politics, people and pedagogies on the prospects of these is
investigated and a model for holistic education, which includes the
wisdom and care of pedagogical love is discussed as way in which a more
human and compassionate approach to education for these and all students
of difference can be integrated into school communities despite neo
liberal imperatives in education. Research indicates that schools which
are spaces of safety and belonging, through leadership of care and
empathy, can provide successful educational opportunities for students
who have asylum seeker and refugee backgrounds and experiences.