This chapter draws on the critical descriptions offered in Chapter 4 (Aaliyah), Chapter 5 (Andy), Chapter 6 (Sadiya) and Chapter 7 (William) to illustrate the role that universities currently play in constraining the educational imaginaries of refugee students. In bringing together the data from Chapters 4–7 into dialogue with the literature on equity, diversity and inclusion in HE, the chapter outlines how the constraints on refugee students' learning and opportunities are created at the level of institutional assumptions in four key areas:

In this chapter, we make the argument that these assumptions – borne out of obsolete beliefs about who our students are in the contemporary HE academy – work together to create exclusionary conditions for ‘non-traditional’ students, and this is especially the case for refugee students like Aaliyah, Andy, Sadiyah – and to a lesser extent for William.

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