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Who we are
Who we are
The No Lost Generation (NLG) is an independent and concerted effort by multiple stakeholders to ensure that the most vulnerable children, adolescents and youth affected by the crises in Syria and Iraq have access to education, protection and opportunities
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UN agencies and international NGOs
Local organizations
Donors
Champions
Children and young people
What we do
What we do
No Lost Generation is a strategic framework for the responses to the Syria and Iraq crises, embedded within existing planning, coordination and reporting structures.
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Our focus areas
Education
Child protection
Adolescents and youth
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Child protection
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Blog post
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Report
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(21)
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(64)
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Blog post
08 February 2022
Behavioural barriers to inclusive education
Jordan hosts close to 673,000 Syrian refugees and has played a pivotal role in the Syrian crisis response since its onset more than a decade ago. While enrolment rates of children were nearly universal in Jordan prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, learning outcomes have been frequently below average. Secondary school enrollments are still lagging…
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Report
01 January 2017
Women, children and youth with disabilities' vulnerability and resilience in the Syrian crisis
Vulnerability criteria, particularly in the earlier years of the Syrian-crisis response, received a lot of focus and attention by humanitarian actors as a method of targeting assistance. Persons with disabilities, an estimated 20 percent of the refugee population, are included in various vulnerability-based criteria and approaches. Humanitarian…
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Report
06 July 2015
Protection of children with disabilities
The Child Protection Working Group presented a PowerPoint on the protection of children with disabilities, including of their protection concerns and the consequences of abuse, violence, exploitation and discrimination. July 2015
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Report
30 June 2015
Jordan child protection sub-working group: children with disabilities - comparative review of data
As part of the Child Protection sub-working group in Jordan, Handicap International and UNHCR presented a comparative review of data regarding children with disabilities in Jordan. It includes an overview of both organizations' disability criteria as well as a presentation of the data collection in both camps and urban settings. June 2015