As part of its continued effort to highlight the pressing need for primary education for all, officially launched a new book at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris in October. Entitled 'Challenges & Reality'. Educate a child is a global programme of the . The volume contains a new collection of images of out of school children from photojournalist Maher Attar. Educate A Child commissioned the book as a means to bring attention to the world's children who have not had their right to a primary education fulfilled.

'The stirring photo reportage in this new book delves into many of the barriers that children face around the world in accessing a primary education', remarked His Excellency Dr. Hamad Bin Abdulaziz Al Kuwari, Minister of Culture, Arts and Heritage for Qatar, who introduced the book on behalf of Education Above All 'Through seeing, we can better understand the importance of the work we are doing¡ªand why there is a sense of urgency to maintain focus.'

The book's launch coincides with the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Included in the goals is a commitment to finishing the push to provide primary education for all. While progress was made in the latter years of the Millennium Development Goals new conflicts and disasters have increased pressure on educational systems in affected and surrounding countries and displaced millions of people, including school-age children. Today, 58 million children worldwide lack access to primary education; more than half of them live in conflict or post-conflict areas. In November, education stakeholders will convene at UNESCO to agree the Framework for Action which will serve as the guide for implementation of the new education goal in the SDGs.

'The reality is that it will take several years for the policies laid out by the SDGs to take effect on the ground. That's not soon enough for the millions of refugee and internally displaced children living without an education right now', said Marcio Barbosa, CEO of EAA. 'During this crucial transition period, we must invest in what we know already works, scaling up successful programmes to rapidly reach as many out of school children as possible. That's the model Educate a Child uses, and it's effective: since its founding in 2012, Educate a Child has put commitments in place to provide primary education to six million children, including among them one million refugee children.'

'Let these photos remind us why we must act', said His Excellency Dr. Al Kuwari, referring to what he hopes readers take away from 'Challenges & Reality'. 'Let them be instruments that compel change so that this generation may be the first to realise the goal set out 15 years ago: the goal that every child will be able to fulfil his or her right to education and build a better life because of it.'