remote populations, migrant and displaced people, and
the poor are also commonly recognized. Few countries
link recognition of specific groups with a mandate to
collect data on their inclusion in education, however.
Who is recognized in a census or survey may reflect
political power and representation. Data that highlight
inequality among groups are not always welcome for
political reasons; groups in power may question their
reliability and worry that drawing attention to such gaps
will fuel resentment among the disadvantaged. A global
analysis of 138 censuses in the 2000 round showed that
more than one-third included no ethnic classification
(Morning, 2008). Political changes can have a major
impact on how groups are captured.
Household surveys have served an important function
in highlighting the relative education progress of various
ethnic groups. The UNICEF Multiple Indicators Cluster
Surveys (MICS), for example, have cast light on Roma
populations’ exclusion from education in south-eastern
Europe, especially at the upper secondary school level.
In Kosovo,
1
almost 60% of youth among the Ashkali,
Egyptian and Roma communities were not attending
upper secondary school in 2019/20, with practically no
change observed since 2014. In Montenegro, 75% of Roma
youth living in Roma settlements did not attend upper
secondary school in 2018, while the national average
was 6% (
Figure 3.4
). Just 3% of Roma youth completed
secondary school, compared with the national average of
86% (Montenegro Statistical Office and UNICEF, 2019).
Questions on nationality, ethnicity or religion touch on
sensitive points of personal identity and can be intrusive.
They may also trigger fear of persecution. No question on
ethnicity or language has been asked in Turkey since the
1965 population census. However, a question on Kurdish
ethnicity has been asked in successive rounds of the
Demographic and Health Surveys (Koc et al., 2008), while
learning assessment surveys, such as the Programme for
International Student Assessment (PISA), identify students
who do not speak the language of instruction at home.
Various factors hamper identification of immigrant and
refugee populations for policy purposes, especially when
those populations are transient. Statistical offices use
techniques to adjust overall census results, but these
cannot replace fine-grained mapping of such populations,
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