Doha - Former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown has warned the underfunding of education means "a human tragedy is unfolding", at an international conference organized by Qatar Foundations global education initiative.
Speaking at Education Disrupted, Education Reimagined Part II a three-day online event hosted by the World Innovation Summit for Education (WISE) Brown, a UN Special Envoy for Global Education, voiced his fears that "hope will die" among millions of children and young people if they are denied access to learning because their countries cannot afford to give them the opportunity.
He called for solutions including debt relief for the poorest nations to allow them to invest in education and health, saying: "I harbor the aspiration that we will be in a world where we are developing the potential of all young people, but we also have to recognize that we have an education emergency impacting the life chances of millions of children around the world.
Brown told the conference that education is being "crowded out" as other areas are prioritized for expenditure and aid, and that low- and middle-income countries with "already low and meager education budgets" could see them cut further, described this as "a recipe for disaster".
"As well as persuading countries that they cannot build for a long-term future without investing in education, we have to remind them that education unlocks opportunities for employment," he said. "We must persuade them that not cutting education budgets is not just in the interests of education, it is in the interests of quality of life.
"Financing education has to be taken seriously, because we cannot send teachers into classrooms without the resources they need, and children into schools without the necessary backing. A human tragedy is unfolding if we do nothing and leave education completely underfunded, lacking the resources to enable children to flourish in the future."
The conference saw participants given an overview of the 2020 Global Education Monitoring (GEM) Report by its director, Manos Antoninis of UNESCO. He said that "identity, background, and ability still dictate education opportunities", highlighting that children with disabilities are two-and-a-half times more likely never to go to school than their peers and, in at least 20 countries, no girls in poor rural areas complete secondary school.
The report also found that inequality has contributed to the education crisis caused by COVID-19, with 40 percent of poorer countries not targeting at-risk learners in their response to the pandemic; and said understanding of the importance of inclusive education needs to be widened, funding should be focused on "those left behind", governments should encourage parents and communities to help design inclusive education policies; and inclusive practice should be a core rather than a specialized topic for teachers development.
"In a world increasingly faced with uncertainty and precariousness," said Antoninis, "inclusion has to be central to the future of education."