It's really important to recognize, as I mentioned earlier, that when we're talking about the right to education, more than 70% of the world's displacement is in countries of the global south, which are already very poor. One way in which Canada can contribute is by financing primary, secondary and tertiary education in those contexts.
In cases that I've been in—in Uganda, for example—education is provided for both locals and refugees in the same schools. This is a good way of helping bring together the development and the humanitarian sides so that both nationals and refugees are benefiting. This is because in some cases, if you provide better education to refugees, it causes problems with local populations, who are also poor and don't have access to education. Resources are one thing.
I would also clarify for the committee that in many contexts, as you probably already know, secondary school is not free. Even local children are not able to access secondary education, so financial support would be one thing.
The second thing I would say is that when we look at the stats on children in school in displacement contexts, we see a disparity between boys and girls. Girls are not going to school because they're expected to have domestic and caregiving responsibilities, but also because there's widespread sexual violence in schools, including by educators. This is an area where there needs to be more advocacy and more sensitization around the rights of women and girls in these contexts.
I would say those are two practical ways in which Canada could encourage more education within these contexts.