This dissertation examines the role of schools in shaping post-conflict social relations in a rapidly growing town in northern Uganda. While there is significant scholarly research documenting how post-contexts are often characterized by patriarchal backlashes against war-time changes in gender and age relations, less is known about how education systems and the actors navigating those systems respond to, make sense of, and influence post-conflict social change. Through an 18-month ethnography, this dissertation examines how teachers and learners navigate the international, national, and local institutional structures and social norms that shape the material conditions and daily realities of schooling in post-conflict northern Uganda. My research reveals that schools were a space where teachers sought to re-establish patriarchal gerontocratic relations based on Acholi norms of discipline, respect, and reciprocity (woro), which they believed to have been eroded most visibly in youth from marginalized backgrounds, such as orphans and girls from impoverished families. Furthermore, the dependency of government schools on Parent Teacher Association fees, due to inadequate government funding, led to the segregation of the poorest learners into the least expensive and least resourced government schools. This segregation created a vicious cycle, in which teachers’ harsh working conditions weakened their self-control and their respectful (woro) treatment of youth, and in which some youth resisted some teachers’ harsh treatment of them in ways that at times reinforced perceptions of them as “undisciplined.” Finally, while the ideology of respect (woro) suggested that performing respect granted social support and protection, the different gendered realities of poorer and wealthier learners (e.g., experiences of violence versus protection and support, respectively) influenced how young people navigated social norms. Poor girls, in particular, found that performing respect did not offer protection from sexual and gender-based violence, in part due to overlapping international, national, and local narratives about poor girls as likely to engage in transactional sex to access material goods. This research has implications for the understanding of social change in conflict zones and the promotion of children’s wellbeing and educational equity in post-conflict schools.