Lebanon
No. 32413. Lebanon and United Nations
Agreement between the united nations and the government of lebanon on the status of the united nations interim force in lebanon. Beirut, 15 december 1995 [united nations, treaty series, vol. 1901, i-32413.]
No. 12800. International Atomic Energy Agency and Lebanon
Agreement between the government of the lebanese republic and the international atomic energy agency for the application of safeguards in connection with the treaty on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons. Vienna, 5 march 1973 [united nations, treaty series, vol. 896, i-12800.]
No. 30568. United States of America and Lebanon
Exchange of notes constituting an agreement concerning a limited air service between Beirut and New York. Washington, 22 December 1982
No. 48738. International Fund for Agricultural Development and Lebanon
Regulated brothels in mandatory Syria and Lebanon: Between the traffic in women and the permanent mandate commissions
No Lost Generation
This paper documents the impact of a cash transfer programme – an initiative of the Government of Lebanon, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the World Food Programme (WFP), widely known as the No Lost Generation Programme (NLG) and, locally, as Min Ila (‘from to’) – on the school participation of displaced Syrian children in Lebanon. The programme provides cash to children who are enrolled in the afternoon shift of a public primary school. It was designed to cover the cost of commuting to school and to compensate households for income forgone if children attend school instead of working, two critical barriers to child school participation. We rely on a geographical regression discontinuity design comparing children living in two pilot governorates with children in two neighbouring governorates to identify the impact of the programme halfway in the first year of operation (the 2016/17 school year). We find limited programme effects on school enrollment, but substantive impacts on school attendance among enrolled children, which increased by 0.5 days to 0.7 days per week, an improvement of about 20 per cent over the control group. School enrollment among Syrian children rose rapidly across all of Lebanon’s governorates during the period of the evaluation, resulting in supply side capacity constraints that appear to have dampened positive impacts on enrollment.
