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Abstract
This paper discusses hopeful futures for higher education and the use of technology in realising those futures through the lens of refugee education in Uganda. Through an analysis of qualitative research done with refugee students and teachers participating in a blended bridging programme designed to prepare students for entry and success in higher education, this paper explores the interplay between contingency and positions of hope for refugee students in relation to higher education and further assimilation into civic society. Two themes emerged from the analysis that suggested a prioritarian orientation for higher education to realise a more hopeful future. First, hope renders as an act of cultivation as refugee students become exposed to new concepts and develop confidence in relation to them. Second, digital technologies broaden the cultivation of hope towards greater civic participation, even if access to higher education is not achieved. Third, hope correlates to action not necessarily as a linear progressive trajectory but as a diligent watchfulness for positive possibility. The implications for higher education are that taking a prioritarian lens for refugees in educational design engages with the contingencies that impact all, placing the sector deliberately in search of positive possibility in its orientation and design.
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Details

1 University of Edinburgh, Centre for Research in Digital Education, Edinburgh, UK (GRID:grid.4305.2) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 7988)
2 Refugee Law Project, Kampala, Uganda (GRID:grid.11194.3c) (ISNI:0000 0004 0620 0548)
3 University of Edinburgh, Moray House School of Education and Sport, Edinburgh, UK (GRID:grid.4305.2) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 7988)