2,120 results on '"forced displacement"'
Search Results
2. On becoming citizens of the ‘non-existent’: document production and Syrian-Circassian wartime migration to Abkhazia
- Author
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Abaza, Gehad M
- Subjects
Migration ,Forced Displacement ,Racialization ,Statecraft ,Passports - Abstract
This paper explores the centrality of passports and identification documents (or their lack thereof) in peoples’ everyday lives and life chances, particularly in the contexts of forced displacement and protracted conflict. While the production of largely internationally unrecognized passports reasserts the logics of the globally dominant modern nation-state order, it also lays bare the problematic, fragile, and performative qualities of that system. I argue that the bureaucratic processes of document production for wartime migrants reveal the racializing effects of codified legal and ethnic classifications. As such, the production of passports and legal identification documents plays a formative role in the ethno-racial exclusions embedded in statecraft projects. This paper invites readers to consider how passports and identification documents affect multiple aspects of life, including access to work opportunities, mobility, and housing—and how people creatively traverse the confinments of these documents and their bureaucratic categories.
- Published
- 2024
3. Intergenerational transmission of traumatic stress and relational disruptions among Cambodian refugee families in the United States.
- Author
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Mak, Chansophal and Wieling, Elizabeth
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POST-traumatic stress disorder , *HEALTH self-care , *PARENTS , *PSYCHOLOGY of refugees , *INTERVIEWING , *NOMADS , *PARENT-child relationships , *FAMILY relations , *MANUSCRIPTS , *ETHNOLOGY , *COMMUNITIES , *EXPERIENCE , *THEMATIC analysis , *CHILD development , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL support , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Cambodian refugees resettled in the United States were severely affected by genocidal trauma and have been trapped in decades of intergenerational transmission of traumatic stress and relational disruptions without much public attention. This manuscript reports on data collected as part of a Cambodian needs assessment that employed methodological principles of critical ethnography and was grounded by a human ecological theoretical model. Eighteen professionals who served Cambodian communities were interviewed. The interviews were transcribed in Khmer or/and English and analyzed using the Developmental Research Sequence resulting in three domains (Pre-Migration, During Migration, and Post Resettlement in the United States) and four categories (i.e. Impact on Self, Couple Relationships, Parent-Child Relationships, and Context) within each domain. The thematic findings emphasize intergenerational transmission of psychopathology, disruptions in parent-child relationships, and a critical need to support parents to promote positive child development within Cambodian communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. The Double Burden of Female Protracted Displacement: Survey Evidence on Gendered Livelihoods in El Fasher, Darfur.
- Author
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Stojetz, Wolfgang and Brück, Tilman
- Subjects
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OLDER women , *SELF-employment , *WOMEN employees , *GENDER , *INTERSECTIONALITY - Abstract
During protracted displacement, women and girls often face serious gender-specific challenges and vulnerabilities, including adverse norms and institutional barriers. Using survey data from 18,533 displaced and non-displaced individuals in El Fasher, Sudan, we document that livelihoods are significantly shaped by a strong and complex intersectionality between long-term displacement and gender. IDP women work more (including paid labour, on- and off-farm self-employment) than non-IDP women but are poorer, on average. For men, there is no such difference in employment between IDPs and non-IDPs. These outcomes are the result of the 'double burden of female protracted displacement'. First, norms and institutions at the destination create access barriers to decent employment (due to women's displacement status). Second, norms and institutions at the place of origin create endowment barriers to decent employment (due to their gender). The double burden is strongest for older displaced women. By contrast, protracted displacement can be an (educational) opportunity for girls who grow up in displacement. Future policies should address the challenges stemming from the intersectionality of gender and protracted displacement by reducing past and contemporary institutional barriers and market asymmetries facing IDP women and by targeting the particular vulnerabilities older IDP women carry, enabling better education and training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Multidimensional Poverty, Gender, and Forced Displacement: A Multi-Country, Intrahousehold Analysis in Sub-Saharan Africa.
- Author
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Scharlin-Pettee, Sophie, Admasu, Yeshwas, and Alkire, Sabina
- Subjects
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FORCED migration , *INTERNALLY displaced persons , *GENDER inequality , *LABOR market , *RELATIONSHIP marketing - Abstract
This paper examines multidimensional poverty among forcibly displaced populations and their host communities using a gendered lens. Some previous studies have explored poverty in forcibly displaced contexts, and others have looked at the relationship between multidimensional poverty and gender, but none have analysed multidimensional poverty and forced displacement from a gender perspective. A tailored measure of multidimensional poverty is applied to refugees and internally displaced populations in five Sub-Saharan African settings substantially affected by forced displacement – Ethiopia, Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan. Our gendered analysis builds on prior analyses using the MPI, examining individual-level deprivations of women and men living in households that have been forcibly displaced and host communities, as well as synthesizing intrahousehold dynamics of multidimensional poverty in forcibly displaced communities. The results provide insights into the educational constraints of boys and girls living in households that have been displaced, the labour market inequalities experienced by men and women in these communities, and their differential access to legal documentation and employment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Forced Displacement, Gender, and Livelihoods: Refugees in Ethiopia.
- Author
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Admasu, Yeshwas
- Subjects
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FORCED migration , *WOMEN refugees , *ECONOMIC opportunities , *JOB vacancies , *GENDER inequality - Abstract
This study uses the Ethiopia Skills Profile Survey (2017) to examine the gender differences in livelihood opportunities and activities between refugees and host communities. The results show a significant gender gap in participation in the labour market where refugee and host women are less likely to have employment, and that household characteristics influence women's economic opportunities. While having a female household head, access to agricultural land, and additional female adults increase both refugee and host female's participation in economic activities, higher numbers of children in the household significantly reduce refugee women's opportunities. In addition, higher educational attainment boosts both male and female refugees' participation in wage employment. Among refugees, both female and male Somali refugees have relatively better access to employment opportunities compared to other refugee groups, especially refugees from South Sudan and Sudan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Gender Dimensions of Forced Displacement: A Brief Review and Introduction to the Special Issue.
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Brück, Tilman, Hanmer, Lucia C., Klugman, Jeni, and Arango, Diana J.
- Subjects
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FORCED migration , *GENDER-based violence , *POLITICAL refugees , *SOCIAL norms , *GENDER , *INTERNALLY displaced persons - Abstract
Displacement has increased continuously over the last 12 years and the number of forcibly displaced persons has reached an unprecedented level. More than half of all forcibly displaced persons are girls or women; yet very little is known about how gender intersects the behavior and welfare of forced displacement. This special issue focuses specifically on the gender dimensions of forced displacement. We make both topical and methodological contributions to knowledge about gender norms, livelihoods, multi-dimensional and income poverty, and gender-based violence and discuss the implications of our findings for future research, policy and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. The Risk That Travels with You: Links Between Forced Displacement, Conflict and Intimate Partner Violence in Colombia and Liberia.
- Author
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Kelly, Jocelyn, Ekhator-Mobayode, Uche, Hanmer, Lucia C., Rubin, Amalia, and Arango, Diana J.
- Subjects
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GENDER-based violence , *INTIMATE partner violence , *FORCED migration , *RISK of violence , *PEACEBUILDING , *GIRLS - Abstract
Displacement and conflict substantially heighten the risk of gender-based violence including intimate partner violence (IPV), experienced by women and girls. This study aims to examine the links between conflict, forced displacement and IPV using nationally representative survey data measuring IPV combined with data on conflict-related violence from two different conflict-affected settings: Colombia and Liberia. We find that forced displacement is strongly associated with increased lifetime and past year IPV. Displaced women and girls in Colombia and Liberia have a 36 and 55 per cent, respectively greater risk of experiencing past year IPV and 39 and 49 per cent greater risk of experiencing lifetime IPV in each country respectively, compared to their non-displaced counterparts. Both conflict and displacement are independently and significantly associated with past year IPV. Taking conflict intensity into account increases the associated IPV risk to 40 and 60 per cent in Colombia and Liberia respectively. Recognising the increased prevalence of IPV for displaced women is vital to providing effective assistance. Humanitarian, state and peace-building efforts, should encompass the provision of a range of assistance services to help displaced and conflict-affected women heal from the impacts of the violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Pregnant Bodies in Transit: Maternity, Migration, and the 1962 Sino-Indian War in Rita Chowdhury's Chinatown Days.
- Author
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Nayak, Barsha and Baruah, Mandakini
- Subjects
CONCENTRATION camps ,HISTORICAL fiction ,BRITISH occupation of India, 1765-1947 ,WAR ,MASS incarceration ,FORCED migration - Abstract
Signed as a response to the Sino-Indian war in 1962, the Defence of India Act facilitated the mass incarceration of Indians having Chinese ethnicity, not even sparing children and pregnant women. Rita Chowdhury's historical fiction Chinatown Days (2018), translated from the Assamese novel Makam (2010), rescues this systematic elimination of the Assamese-Chinese narrative that is otherwise absent in the dominant paradigms of this war history. Chowdhury conducts a rare historiography tracing the origin of the community in colonial India, their internment at the Deoli camp following the war of 1962, and ultimately their deportation to China. Chowdhury's novel illustrates that the worst victims of this forced migration were the women who had to bear the burden of their reproductive bodies. By borrowing specific contexts from Chowdhury's fiction that illuminates the challenges faced by pregnant Assamese-Chinese women, this paper conducts a gendered investigation into the events of this state-sanctioned forced displacement and deportation. It interrogates the idea of constructive nation-building through state-sanctioned banishment of the unborn racially undesirable Assamese-Chinese children. It examines how the displaced pregnant female bodies are doubly marginalized in internment camps, having no access to proper sanitation or nutrition, and how they are treated as mere tools to stage political dissent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Disrupting binary thinking about sanctuary initiatives in the UK and Australia: insights from a Derridean analysis of hostipitality.
- Author
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Murray, Rebecca and Baker, Sally
- Subjects
HOSPITALITY ,IMMIGRATION policy - Abstract
Despite their geographical distance, the UK and Australia share proximity with their hostile immigration policies and managed migration practices, characterised by inhumanity under the guise of deterrence. People Seeking Asylum (PSA) who seek sanctuary typically endure protracted temporariness, which denies them access to state resources and imposes limitations on access to post-compulsory education. Despite state-endorsed exclusion, universities in both countries have developed approaches to circumventing immigration barriers by offering access via scholarships. The case of PSA, therefore, offers insights into the ways that Derrida's notion of 'hostipitality' – a conceptualisation of the tangled binary of hospitality and hostility – operates in higher education. In this article, we explore the types of hospitality that universities across the UK and Australia have invited PSA to cross the threshold into university study and transcend barriers imposed at the national level, and question how these modes of 'welcome' work to counter sector and state-level apparatus of rejection or reinforce existing barriers. We construct our argument around the disruption of three key binaries: host/stranger; settled/unsettled immigration status; and deserving/undeserving migrant. In doing so, we navigate the complexity of the conditions shaping access and welcome as forms of sanctuary within universities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Gilroy's Black Atlantic diaspora: climate displacement and rights‐bearing beyond the nation.
- Author
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Sæten, Nanna Lilletvedt
- Subjects
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AFRICAN diaspora , *POLITICAL science , *CLIMATE change , *DIASPORA , *SOVEREIGNTY - Abstract
Nationalism studies have only recently started to grapple with the Anthropocene as a foundational shift for the discipline. One of the effects of climate change is the forced displacement of large populations, and if access to rights cannot be ensured outside the structures of territorial sovereignty, this migration could easily translate into widespread rightlessness. I argue that this necessitates a rethinking of how communities become rights‐bearing and how such rights‐bearing communities have existed outside the structures of the nation‐state. Specifically, I propose looking to Paul Gilroy's account of the Black Atlantic diaspora as an example of a rights‐bearing community that successfully claimed “the right to have rights” through a concerted effort of vocalising experiences of displacement. Reading Gilroy through rights‐scholarship in political theory I argue that the Black Atlantic can inform work on climate diasporas and their latent political potential as rights‐bearing communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The ephemerality of bearing witness: participatory refugee theatre with Syrian young adults in exile.
- Author
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de Smet, Sofie, Fleishman, Mark, Rousseau, Cécile, Stalpaert, Christel, and De Haene, Lucia
- Abstract
In this essay, we critically reflect upon the ephemeral nature of theatre. Such a reflection becomes particularly important in participatory refugee theatre, since the process of participants' bearing witness to experiences of trauma and violence is emphasised as the core impetus. To this end, we investigate the experiences of Syrian young adults participating in a theatre project in Belgium. We argue that the ephemeral nature of theatre enables a potential to initiate reparative pathways of bearing witness by creating a space that may hold both remembrance and forgetfulness, as well as distance and interconnectedness. In a final section, we discuss the implications for theatre practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Predictors of well‐being among Syrian women in northern and southern Türkiye.
- Author
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Shaw, Stacey A., Yalim, Asli, Dinç, Yasemin, Yalniz, Aylin, and Yang, Chongming
- Subjects
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RISK assessment , *CROSS-sectional method , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGY of refugees , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SYRIANS , *SOCIAL case work , *METROPOLITAN areas , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SOCIAL support , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *WELL-being - Abstract
The growing crisis of forced displacement calls for attention to refugee well‐being globally. This study examined distress among 123 young‐adult Syrian women (ages 18–30 years) residing in five cities across Türkiye (Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, Adana, and Gaziantep). Utilizing a social‐ecological framework, the study examines risk and protective factors associated with distress as well as differing risk contexts in northern and southern cities. Emotional distress was experienced by 91% of the sample, with rates significantly higher in southern cities. Mixture modelling results indicated social support was associated with increased well‐being across locations. Discrimination and living difficulties were more common in southern cities and associated with distress only in southern cities. Isolation was associated with increased distress only in northern cities. Attention to regional stressors and resources points to a need for responsive policy solutions and tailored social service programming to support refugee well‐being. Please refer to the Supplementary Material section to find this article's Community and Social Impact Statement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Do UN peace operations help forcibly displaced people?
- Author
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Costalli, Stefano, Di Salvatore, Jessica, and Ruggeri, Andrea
- Subjects
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FORCED migration , *CIVIL war , *ECONOMIC security , *INTERNALLY displaced persons , *REFUGEES ,UNITED Nations peacekeeping forces - Abstract
Do UN missions reduce forced displacement? Facing insecure environments, civilians are left with three choices: staying; moving to a safer community; or moving outside their country. Their aspiration and ability to move depend on individual characteristics and macro-level factors, such as the social, economic and political context in which these people live. Research shows that UN missions can impact and reset the macro-level context altered by war, especially in the security and economic domain. However, we lack empirical evidence on whether this impact helps UN peacekeeping tackle forced displacement and returns. This article offers the first global analysis of whether and how UN missions can shape aggregate population movements during civil wars. We combine data on outflows and returns of refugees and internally displaced people (IDPs) with data on distinct UN missions' features that we expect to affect population movements, namely the size of their contingents and their mandated tasks. Using matched samples, we find that the unfolding of the outflows and inflows processes are affected by different features of UN missions. Sizeable deployments decrease IDPs flows and encourage their return; refugee outflows, on the other hand, may increase in presence of UN missions. Furthermore, missions with displacement-related mandates are associated with decreasing IDP flows overall, but only encourage refugees' returns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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15. In-person vs mobile app facilitated life skills education to improve the mental health of internally displaced persons in Nigeria: protocol for the RESETTLE-IDPs cluster randomized hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation trial.
- Author
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Eboreime, Ejemai, Obi-Jeff, Chisom, Orji, Rita, Ojo, Tunde M, Iyamu, Ihoghosa, Harri, Bala I, Said, Jidda M, Oguntimehin, Funmilayo, Ibrahim, Abdulrahman, Anjorin, Omolayo, Duke, Andem Effiong Etim, Musami, Umar Baba, Liebenberg, Linda, Crider, Raquel, Wagami, Lydia, Dahiru, Asmau MC, Uneke, Jesse C., Yaya, Sanni, and Agyapong, Vincent IO
- Subjects
- *
LIFE skills education , *MENTAL illness , *WAR , *INTERNALLY displaced persons , *MENTAL health education - Abstract
Background: Internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Nigeria face a high burden of mental health disorders, with limited access to evidence-based, culturally relevant interventions. Life skills education (LSE) is a promising approach to promote mental health and psychosocial well-being in humanitarian settings. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness and implementation of a culturally adapted LSE program delivered through in-person and mobile platforms among IDPs in Northern Nigeria. Methods: This cluster-randomized hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation trial will be conducted in 20 IDP camps or host communities in Maiduguri, Nigeria. Sites will be randomly assigned to receive a 12-week LSE program delivered either through in-person peer support groups or WhatsApp-facilitated mobile groups. The study will recruit 500 participants aged 13 years and older. Intervention effectiveness outcomes include the primary outcome of change in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms assessed using the PCL-5 scale, and secondary outcomes of depression, anxiety, well-being, and life skills acquisition. Implementation outcomes will be assessed using the Acceptability of Intervention Measure (AIM), Intervention Appropriateness Measure (IAM), and Feasibility of Intervention Measure (FIM). Both sets of outcomes will be compared between the in-person and mobile delivery groups. Quantitative data will be analyzed using mixed-effects linear regression models, while qualitative data will be examined through reflexive thematic analysis. The study will be guided by the Reach-Effectiveness-Adoption-Implementation-Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework. Discussion: The RESETTLE-IDPs study addresses key gaps in the evidence base on mental health interventions for conflict-affected populations. It focuses on underserved IDP populations, evaluates the comparative effectiveness of in-person and mobile-delivered LSE, and incorporates implementation science frameworks to assess contextual factors influencing adoption, fidelity, and sustainability. The study employs a community-based participatory approach to enhance cultural relevance, acceptability, and ownership. Findings will inform the development and scale-up of evidence-based, sustainable mental health interventions for IDPs in Nigeria and other humanitarian contexts. Trial sponsor: Dalhousie University, 6299 South St, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT06412679 Registered 15 May 2024. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Sex Work, Antitrafficking, and Mobility.
- Author
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Dasgupta, Simanti
- Subjects
- *
FORCED migration , *SEX trafficking , *SEX work , *CAPITAL movements , *RACE - Abstract
With the HIV/AIDS epidemic gripping the world in the 1990s and the resurgence of the antitrafficking discourse in the 2000s, the sex work/abolitionist debate took center stage. Proponents of sex work uphold the labor and livelihood paradigm based on consent; the abolitionists, on the other hand, dismiss sex work as work to posit prostitution as the paradigmatic example of patriarchal violence toward women. The latter routinely conflate sex work with trafficking, and the former sharply demarcates them. Above all, this debate poses a stubborn ideological divide among feminists with serious policy implications for both the worker and the victim, nationally and globally. Therefore, to imagine a pathway beyond this divide, this review centers on mobility and migration vis-à-vis labor and livelihood. Sex work offers insights into migration broadly speaking because it highlights the intersecting issues of labor, agency, gender, sexual mores, and displacement, all embedded within the global flows of capital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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17. The right to the city for urban refugees? Living in the shadow of the camp in Nairobi, Amman and Addis Ababa.
- Author
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Earle, Lucy
- Subjects
FORCED migration ,HUMANITARIAN assistance ,REFUGEE camps ,CITIES & towns ,URBAN life - Abstract
This paper investigates the multiple ways in which the lives of urban refugees are impacted by the presence of refugee camps. It builds on a growing body of literature on the urban refugee experience that recognizes the agency exercised in the rejection of the camp. But it also demonstrates how, in countries with an encampment policy, the presence of camps can limit urban refugees' mobility and their ability to take advantage of all that urban life has to offer. It also highlights the consequences of the choice refugees must make between receiving humanitarian aid in a camp and living unassisted in an urban area. The paper draws on qualitative interviews with refugees in Ethiopia, Kenya and Jordan. It presents conclusions on the inadequacy of the international response, which fails to capitalize on the presence of displaced people in cities, to achieve the supposed policy goal of "self-reliance". [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. Improving livelihoods outcomes for forcibly displaced populations: a Rapid Review
- Author
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Brown, Elizabeth, Stillman, Sarah, Soliman, Farida, Romao, Davi, and Katairo, Thomas
- Subjects
forced displacement ,refugees ,livelihoods interventions ,low- and middle-income settings ,rapid review - Abstract
Globally, the number of forcibly displaced individuals has surpassed 100 million, with approximately80 percent situated in low- or middle-income countries. In these resource-constrained settings the magnitude and protracted nature of displacement poses an increasing challenge. Recent policy discourse has begun to shift away from emergency response interventions towards those that promote investments inthe human capital and self-reliance of displaced populations. This paper reviews evidence of the impacts and costs of eleven interventions designed to improve the livelihoods of forcibly displaced people in low-and middle-income settings. The study team finds suggestive evidence that graduation-style approaches and cash transfers can improve people’s self-employment, wages, engagement in paid work and wellbeing. However, too few studies have been conducted among the exact populations and settings of interest to discern clear strategies for adapting interventions for success in every context. To address this gap, the authors introduce a primitive taxonomy of contextual factors, which encourages more robust discussion of how context impacts interventions. It will be important for future research to both evaluate a broader range of interventions, and to more systematically identify the effects of context to advance our understanding of how to improve the economic wellbeing of displaced people.
- Published
- 2023
19. A Scoping Review of the Intimate Partner Violence Literature Among Afghans Across Contexts.
- Author
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Wachter, Karin, Baccam, Zoe, Burgess, Tanya, and Alemi, Qais
- Subjects
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AFGHANS , *RISK assessment , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *INTIMATE partner violence , *RESEARCH funding , *CINAHL database , *HELP-seeking behavior , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *MEDLINE , *RELIGION , *ONLINE information services , *REFUGEES - Abstract
The purpose of this scoping review was to ascertain the scope and nature of the literature focused on intimate partner violence (IPV) among Afghans across contexts, including Afghanistan. The scoping review adopted a systematic approach to search for, identify, and include peer-reviewed articles published in English. Fifty-two articles were retained in the final analysis, which generated results on IPV prevalence; multi-level risk and protective factors; qualitatively derived contextual factors; associations of IPV with adverse physical and psychological outcomes; IPV-related help-seeking behaviors; programs and interventions; the role of religion; IPV-related policies; and the role of fiction. Findings indicate that past-year physical IPV prevalence ranged from 52% to 56% in Afghanistan and 79.8% among Afghan refugees displaced in Iran. Studies conducted in Afghanistan identified a range of IPV risk factors occurring at the individual (e.g., age and employment), interpersonal/household (e.g., acceptance of IPV and violence perpetrated by in-laws), and societal levels (e.g., conflict/displacement). The findings highlight a rich literature on IPV in Afghanistan and significant gaps in IPV research across the Afghan diaspora and in contexts of displacement and resettlement. The results advance understanding of the drivers of IPV in the diverse Afghan population and highlight context-specific gaps, and needs for intervention and future research. These gaps indicate the importance of conducting research elucidating how risk and protective factors associated with IPV shift in forced migration and resettlement, and an urgent need for the development and testing of services and programs that respond to the specific needs of Afghan women experiencing IPV across contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. A psychosocial bouldering intervention improves the well-being of young refugees and adolescents from the host community in Lebanon: results from a pragmatic controlled trial
- Author
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Katharina Luttenberger, Beat Baggenstos, Charbel Najem, Charles Sifri, Piotr Lewczuk, Anne Radegast, and Simon Rosenbaum
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Lebanon ,Forced displacement ,Syria ,Refugee ,Physical activity ,MHPSS ,Special situations and conditions ,RC952-1245 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) is increasingly considered vital for addressing the needs of displaced communities. The mental health of young people in Lebanon, including members of the host community and refugees, has been severely affected by multiple crises. Physical activity (PA) is an effective means for enhancing mental health, but evidence of PA’s impact on mental health among forcibly displaced populations is still emerging and often varies widely across studies. Method In this waitlist-controlled study, we examined the effectiveness of an 8-week psychosocial bouldering group intervention offered by the nonprofit organization ClimbAID on psychological well-being, distress, self-efficacy, and social cohesion in a group of mostly Syrian refugee adolescents residing in the Bekaa Valley, Lebanon. The intervention consisted of 8 sessions and took place once a week for 2 h in a group of up to 12 adolescents with 2 trained facilitators and up to 2 volunteers, supervised by a climbing instructor and a social worker. Multilevel analyses were performed for all outcomes. Results 233 people were included in the study. The dropout rate was approximately 33%. The IG improved significantly more than the waitlist group in terms of overall mental well-being and psychological distress. Group allocation was a significant predictor of improvements in mental well-being and psychological distress and showed a trend toward predicting self-efficacy. There was no positive impact of the intervention on social cohesion. Conclusions Even in complex humanitarian settings of forced displacement, a psychosocial bouldering intervention reduces psychological distress and increases well-being in a mixed group of host and refugee youth in Bekaa, Lebanon. Trial registration Prospectively registered with ISRCTN 13005983, registered April 1st, 2022.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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21. A psychosocial bouldering intervention improves the well-being of young refugees and adolescents from the host community in Lebanon: results from a pragmatic controlled trial.
- Author
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Luttenberger, Katharina, Baggenstos, Beat, Najem, Charbel, Sifri, Charles, Lewczuk, Piotr, Radegast, Anne, and Rosenbaum, Simon
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being , *YOUNG adults , *FORCED migration , *PSYCHOTHERAPY , *SOCIAL support - Abstract
Background: Mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) is increasingly considered vital for addressing the needs of displaced communities. The mental health of young people in Lebanon, including members of the host community and refugees, has been severely affected by multiple crises. Physical activity (PA) is an effective means for enhancing mental health, but evidence of PA's impact on mental health among forcibly displaced populations is still emerging and often varies widely across studies. Method: In this waitlist-controlled study, we examined the effectiveness of an 8-week psychosocial bouldering group intervention offered by the nonprofit organization ClimbAID on psychological well-being, distress, self-efficacy, and social cohesion in a group of mostly Syrian refugee adolescents residing in the Bekaa Valley, Lebanon. The intervention consisted of 8 sessions and took place once a week for 2 h in a group of up to 12 adolescents with 2 trained facilitators and up to 2 volunteers, supervised by a climbing instructor and a social worker. Multilevel analyses were performed for all outcomes. Results: 233 people were included in the study. The dropout rate was approximately 33%. The IG improved significantly more than the waitlist group in terms of overall mental well-being and psychological distress. Group allocation was a significant predictor of improvements in mental well-being and psychological distress and showed a trend toward predicting self-efficacy. There was no positive impact of the intervention on social cohesion. Conclusions: Even in complex humanitarian settings of forced displacement, a psychosocial bouldering intervention reduces psychological distress and increases well-being in a mixed group of host and refugee youth in Bekaa, Lebanon. Trial registration: Prospectively registered with ISRCTN 13005983, registered April 1st, 2022. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The Narrative Construction of Peter in the Gospel of Mark in Light of the Reports of Displacement and Exile Due to the Armed Conflict in Colombia.
- Author
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Casas-Ramírez, Juan Alberto
- Abstract
A scenario of conflict, as in the Colombian case, may be related to the socio-political context in which the Gospel according to Mark may have been written, and therefore offers new insights for the understanding of the narrative phenomena presented. In effect, Mark could have been a response to the traumatic experiences of the followers of Jesus to whom the Gospel was addressed. Likewise, the experience of those displaced and exiled by the Colombian armed conflict has involved a series of traumatic events, but also bears witness to processes of resilient reparation. Against this background, it is proposed that in Mark, the figure of Peter, courageous and determined at the beginning but cowardly and flighty at the end, is analogous to that of many victims in the Colombian armed conflict who, faced with the imminent danger of losing their lives, were forced to abandon their deepest convictions and even their loved ones to end up fleeing into hiding and exile. Nevertheless, both Mark and the experience of those displaced and exiled because of the conflict in Colombia suggest the possibility of vindication of these victims and their respective narratives, helping them to recognize that their flight was not a betrayal and that, thanks to it, the memory of the events can be reconstructed to guarantee the truth and the non-repetition of the facts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The Making of a "Lost Generation": Child Labor among Syrian Refugees in Turkey.
- Author
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Dayıoğlu, Meltem, Kırdar, Murat Güray, and Koç, İsmet
- Subjects
- *
POOR children , *CHILD labor , *SYRIAN refugees , *SCHOOL integration , *NATURAL disasters - Abstract
Millions of children are forcibly displaced worldwide due to wars, civil conflicts, and natural disasters. Displacement disrupts the lives of children making child labor a serious risk. However, little is known about this topic due to the difficulty of finding datasets for this population. In this study, we use a large representative dataset of Syrian refugees in Turkey, the largest refugee group in any single country, to examine the incidence of child labor and its determinants. The incidence of paid work is remarkably high among boys: 18.8 percent of 12–14 year-olds and 48.0 percent of 15–17 year-olds are in paid employment. These percentages are considerably higher than the corresponding values we estimate for pre-war Syria at 7.6 percent and 29.0 percent, respectively. We find that children from poorer households with more dependents and younger, less educated, and female household heads and children living in industrialized regions of Turkey and originating from rural Syria are more likely to work. A key finding is that being older at arrival is highly associated with child labor. Difficulties with school integration, on the one hand, and availability of job opportunities, on the other, have created a group of young out-of-school children at work. Placing these children in vocational training that allows them to work while learning a trade under the scrutiny of the Ministry of Education may help protect their well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The demand for welfare institutions in refugee camps.
- Author
-
Rahman Bhuiyan, Md. Mahmudur
- Subjects
REFUGEE camps ,FORCED migration ,WELL-being ,DESPAIR ,WELFARE state - Abstract
Long-term encampment has become a reality for a large portion of the forcibly displaced population of the contemporary world, given the inadequacies and limitations of the conventional durable solutions to forced displacement. However, encampment is principally a temporary arrangement that prevents long-term programming in camps, making long-term encampment contradictory and an arena of uncertainty, misery, and despair for the camp dwellers. It is rather more rational to admit long-term encampment as a reality and act on it as it involves unjustifiable humanitarian costs. The paper calls for thinking beyond the conventional practices and focusing on the wellbeing of the encamped population from a life-course perspective. It proposes a framework for building welfare institutions in refugee camps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Associations between affective temperament, perceived stress, and helping among Ukrainians and Poles in the context of the war in Ukraine.
- Author
-
Piskunowicz, Małgorzata Tatiana, Kołodziej, Kosma, Altukhova, Valeriia, Wojtasik, Jakub, Jaremko, Tatiana, and Borkowska, Alina
- Subjects
- *
SUBJECTIVE stress , *WAR , *HOME safety , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *TEMPERAMENT , *UKRAINIANS - Abstract
The Russian aggression of Ukraine has put millions of civilians under immense stress and forced many of them to leave their homes for safety and help. Poland became one of the leading destinations for waves of Ukrainians fleeing this war. The level of perceived stress in people who experienced war depends on various factors, including individual psychological variables. The main aim of this study was to analyze perceived stress levels and the predictive role of affective temperaments, as defined by Akiskal, for perceived stress in Ukrainians and Poles during the first year of the Russo‐Ukrainian war. Secondly, we studied the relationship between affective temperament, stress, and commitment to help Ukrainian refugees. Self‐report data from 410 Ukrainians and 146 Poles were collected. The results of this study shed light on perceived stress in war‐affected populations and the role of affective temperaments in predicting its levels. We also demonstrated the links between affective temperament, perceived stress, and involvement in helping Ukrainian refugees. Understanding the mental status of people affected by war and its predictors is crucial to providing appropriate support and assistance to those in need. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Governance and duty in global refugee education: a Kantian perspective.
- Author
-
Storen, Inga C.
- Subjects
KANTIAN ethics ,FORCED migration ,INTERNATIONAL organization ,DUTY ,CONVENTION Relating to the Status of Refugees (1951) ,REFUGEES - Abstract
The broad adoption of the human-rights based approach to refugee education has not only accentuated the link between education provision and the realization of human rights; it has re-framed refugees as right-bearers. This conceptual shift from 'refugee as victim' to 'refugee as right-bearer' carries with it immense implications also for the way we think of the duty-bearers of refugee education. Once we re-conceptualize refugees as right-bearers, we acknowledge, too, the primacy of duty-bearers and 'global moral obligations'. In this article, I first consider the history of global governance of refugee education, dating back to the ratification of the 1951 UN Refugee Convention. In tracing the shifting role of stakeholders in refugee education, I note, in particular, how the burden of responsibility of education policy and provision has oscillated between local host communities and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Next, I look at how rights and responsibilities are conceptualized in forced displacement context, that is, in the absence of a nation-state--traditionally considered the primary duty-bearer of human rights. Finally, I turn to Kant's duty-based ethics, and suggest a Kantian perspective can help expand our understanding of duties and duty-bearers in global refugee education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. India's Refugee Policy: A Critical Analysis.
- Author
-
Borah, Durllav and Das, Boikuntha
- Subjects
FORCED migration ,CRITICAL analysis ,NATIONAL interest ,POLICY analysis ,REFUGEES - Abstract
The paper titled "India's Refugee Policy: A Critical Analysis" engages in a comprehensive examination of India's approach to refugees, aiming to provide a nuanced understanding of the policy landscape. As the global refugee crisis persists, nations are increasingly challenged to address the humanitarian and geopolitical dimensions of forced displacement. This research endeavors to shed light on India's response to this complex issue. The study employs a critical analytical framework to evaluate the historical evolution of India's refugee policy, encompassing legislative measures, government initiatives, and international collaborations. By tracing the policy trajectory, the research discerns the driving factors and underlying principles that have shaped India's stance on refugees over time. Special attention is given to key events and geopolitical shifts that have influenced policy dynamics. Furthermore, the paper delves into the implementation and enforcement aspects of India's refugee policy, scrutinizing the challenges faced in providing protection, livelihood, and integration opportunities for displaced populations. The examination extends beyond legal frameworks to assess the effectiveness of practical measures in ensuring the well-being of refugees within the Indian context. The critical analysis also explores the geopolitical considerations that inform India's refugee policy, taking into account regional dynamics, security concerns, and diplomatic implications. By examining the intersections of humanitarian principles and national interests, the paper seeks to elucidate the balancing act that characterizes India's approach to refugee management. This research contributes to the discourse on refugee policies by offering a thorough examination of India's unique position in addressing the challenges posed by forced displacement. The insights gleaned from this critical analysis can inform policymakers, scholars, and international stakeholders in refining strategies for more effective and compassionate refugee management globally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
28. التهجير القسري لسكان غزة: استكمال لمخططات الاقتلاع والتهويد الصهيونية.
- Author
-
سناء حمودي
- Subjects
- *
INVOLUNTARY relocation , *ISRAEL-Hamas War, 2023- , *ZIONISM ,ISRAELI politics & government - Abstract
The forced displacement operation held by the Zionist government in the Gaza Strip since the beginning of its war on the Strip in October 7, 2023 have faced criticism and opposition from all sides. However, the Israeli war government, which found in Operation Flood of Al-Aqsa an opportunity to expel the people of Gaza to areas outside the Strip, insists on implementing this plan. This paper discusses the nature of the Zionist plans that aim to displace and uproot the Palestinians from their land. These are old and renewed plans that accompanied the plan to establish the Jewish national homeland in Palestine. The paper seeks to track these plans and anticipate the future of the population in the Gaza Strip in light of the war of extermination waged by «Israel», and preventing the displaced to the southern part of the Strip on the border with Egypt from returning to their homes in the central and northern areas of Gaza. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
29. Interconnections between children's upbringing, camps, and post‐war villages: caregivers' lived experiences in northern Uganda.
- Author
-
De Nutte, Leen, De Haene, Lucia, and Derluyn, Ilse
- Subjects
- *
CAREGIVERS , *WORLD War II , *POLITICAL refugees , *RURAL children , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Since the end of the Second World War in 1945, the erection of camps within and across state borders has become the most common response to the influx of displaced persons. Based on empirical evidence from northern Uganda, this paper aims to provide answers to two main questions: (i) how does the camp influence and frame the upbringing of children?; and (ii) how do caregivers shape and adjust upbringing within this setting and when they return to their 'former homes' ? Interviews and focus‐group discussions were conducted with 48 caregivers living in Kitgum District, northern Uganda. Deductive thematic analysis was employed to structure participants' accounts of past and present interconnections between upbringing and (previous) encampment. By paying close attention to their (counter‐)narratives, people's agency and coping are emphasised through the simultaneous forging of new interconnections (that is, discontinuities) and holding on to old interconnections (that is, continuities) between upbringing, the camp, and the post‐war village. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. MENTAL HEALTH AND PSYCHOSOCIAL SUPPORT FOR FORCIBLY DISPLACED PEOPLE: INSIGHTS FROM SLOVENIA.
- Author
-
Gostič, Maja
- Abstract
Copyright of Two Homelands / Dve Domovini is the property of Scientific Research Centre of Slovenian Academy of Sciences & Arts and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Linking Energy Poverty, Environmental Justice and Forced Displacement: Controversies and Ways Forward
- Author
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Rosignoli, Francesca, Whitman, Jim, Series Editor, Farah, Paolo D., Series Editor, Iglesias Márquez, Daniel, editor, Esteve-Jordà, Clara, editor, and Felipe Pérez, Beatriz, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Displaced and Forgotten: Unveiling Northwest Nigeria’s Armed Banditry Induced Humanitarian Crisis
- Author
-
Aina, Folahanmi, Ojo, John Sunday, Ojo, John Sunday, editor, Aina, Folahanmi, editor, and Oyewole, Samuel, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Surviving the Shadows: Armed Conflict Exposure and Forced Displacement Experience of Cameroonian Refugees in Southern Nigeria: Surviving the Shadows: Armed Conflict Exposure and Forced Displacement Experience of Cameroonian Refugees in Southern Nigeria
- Author
-
Attah-Otu, Bernard
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. WHO’s end of TB targets: unachievable by 2035 without addressing under nutrition, forced displacement, and homelessness: trend analysis from 2015 to 2022
- Author
-
Birhanu Ayenew, Dawit Misganaw Belay, Yegoraw Gashaw, Wondimu Gimja, and Yimenu Gardie
- Subjects
End TB ,WHO End TB target ,Undernutrition ,Forced displacement ,Homelessness ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Tuberculosis (TB) remains a significant global health challenge, despite the World Health Organization (WHO) actively working towards its eradication through various initiatives and programs. Undernutrition, forced displacement, and homelessness worsen TB’s burden and challenge control efforts; however, there is still no adequate research that shows the trend of these underlying factors to attain the WHO’s ambitious TB targets. So, this study aims to analyze the trend analysis of these underlying factors worldwide from 2015 to 2022 and their impact on the feasibility and implications of reaching the End TB targets by 2035. We utilized international databases, including UNHCR, FAO, and WHO reports, as secondary data sources. Data were extracted chronologically from 2015 to 2022 to illustrate trends in undernutrition, forced displacement, and homelessness on a global level. This trend analysis reveals that undernutrition, forced displacement, and homelessness have worsened over time. Undernutrition rose from 8.4 to 9.8% globally between 2015 and 2021, affecting 22.7 million additional individuals each year. In 2022, undernutrition affected 735 million people globally. Africa (21.9%) and Asia (10.6%) had the highest rates, while Western Europe and North America had lower rates than the global average: 3.4% and 2.5%, respectively. Similarly, the global rate of forced displacement increased from 65.1 million people in 2015 to 108.4 million in 2022, a 21% increase from 2021. This means that an extra 19 million people were displaced in 2021. Globally, homelessness, affecting 1.6 billion people, has worsened over time. Despite being a highly vulnerable group to TB, homeless individuals are often neglected in TB control efforts. Our findings underscore the critical importance of addressing undernutrition, forced displacement, and homelessness in achieving the World Health Organization’s ambitious End TB targets by 2035, as highlighted through trend analysis from 2015 to 2022. Implementing policies focusing on nutrition, stable housing, and the challenges faced by displaced populations is imperative for progress toward a TB-free world.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Fleeing Ukraine: The Forced Migration Journeys of Black African Students.
- Author
-
Kingston, Lindsey N. and Ekakitie, Igho
- Subjects
- *
FORCED migration , *RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- , *RACE discrimination , *RACE ,BLACK Africans - Abstract
AbstractThis study utilizes qualitative interview data to chronicle the migration journeys of 15 Black African international students who escaped the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. This research addresses a literature gap related to the vulnerabilities and challenges experienced by non-national minorities in times of crisis. While the migration journey out of Ukraine was difficult for both nationals and non-nationals, interview data highlights how Black African international students faced specific obstacles related to their foreignness and race. Their problems frequently centered on accessing information, decision making, and experiencing racial discrimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Ruling out rescue at sea? Rohingya, maritime escapes, and the criminalization of smugglers-cum-rescuers in Indonesia.
- Author
-
Missbach, Antje
- Subjects
- *
CUSTOMARY law , *MOBILITY of law , *INTERNATIONAL law , *RESCUE work , *LAW of the sea , *HUMAN smuggling , *SMUGGLING - Abstract
Th is article examines a case in which three fisher men were sentenced for people smuggling after having rescued 99 refugees from their sinking ship near Indonesia. Th e analysis is grounded in the juxtaposition of three different sets of mobility rules-Indonesian migration law, customary law of the sea, and international law for search and rescue at sea. It argues that recent mobility restrictions at the Indonesian state level implemented to deter maritime movements are in violation of longer-standing local and international sets of mobility rules meant to protect lives at sea. Th e findings show a legal precedent that could cause potential non-state rescuers to abandon rescue to avoid state sanctions, while states may enjoy impunity for disregarding international law concerning the rescue of people in distress at sea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Data triangulation strategies to design a representative household survey of hosts and Rohingya displaced in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.
- Author
-
Endara, Joaquin, Genoni, Maria Eugenia, Khan, Afsana I, Kosmidou-Bradley, Walker, Muñoz, Juan, Palaniswamy, Nethra, and Vishwanath, Tara
- Subjects
- *
ROHINGYA (Burmese people) , *HOUSEHOLD surveys , *TRIANGULATION , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys , *CARTOGRAPHY - Abstract
Obtaining representative information on hosts and displaced populations in a single survey is not straightforward. This article demonstrates the value of combining traditional and nontraditional sampling frames, geospatial information, and listing exercises to design a representative survey of hosts and Rohingya displaced populations in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. The article applies innovative segmentation techniques using geospatial data to delimit enumeration areas in the absence of updated cartography. The article also highlights the importance of listing exercises to inform stratification decisions and update population counts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The New York City Real Estate Industry and Voter Suppression.
- Author
-
WALLACE, DEBORAH and WALLACE, RODRICK
- Subjects
VOTER suppression ,REAL estate business ,URBAN renewal ,MAYORAL elections ,POLITICAL community - Abstract
The built environment anchors social, economic, and political community. A limited neighbourhood milieu fosters and maintains relationships that enable a community to realize its values. Fundamental civic activities such as getting out the vote depend on this empowerment. Voting has declined across New York City, but especially in the Bronx, which experienced the largest decline in voting between the 1969 and 2021 mayoral elections. The South and Central Bronx is now the largest city area of extremely low voter participation. This paper explores how public policies generated by the real estate industry – specifically redlining, urban renewal, and planned shrinkage – in conjunction with the Permanent Registration article in the 1938 New York State Constitution suppressed voting. The distribution of premature mortality and other health problems in the Bronx appear to be another consequence of these policies. That is, disempowerment and health erosion appear related and stem from influence of the real estate industry on mayoral policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. En tránsito por el norte de Chile: Desplazamiento forzado de población venezolana bajo el control fronterizo y sanitario durante la pandemia por COVID‐19 (2020‐2021).
- Author
-
Liberona Concha, Nanette, Rodríguez, Romina Ramos, Rivera, Carlos Piñones, and Ramírez, Marioly Corona
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,POLITICAL refugees ,MILITARISM ,ETHNOLOGY ,INTERGENERATIONAL mobility - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Latin American & Caribbean Anthropology is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Forced displacement and subsequent generations’ migration intentions: intergenerational transmission of family migration capital.
- Author
-
Brunarska, Zuzanna and Ivlevs, Artjoms
- Subjects
- *
SMUGGLING , *SMUGGLERS , *CRIMINALS , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *MULTIVARIATE analysis - Abstract
A growing body of evidence for the ‘family migration capital’ hypothesis – whereby migration experience in a family leads to a greater propensity to move among migrants’ descendants – has so far relied on accounts of any migration experience, including voluntary moves. However, in the case of voluntary migration, a considerable part of the observable effect may be due to self-selection into migration and passing the migration-driving characteristics across generations rather than due to the transmission of ‘capital’ derived from migration. To minimise the influence of self-selection, we consider the effects of forced migration, where self-selection is less prevalent than in voluntary migration. Using data from the nationally representative Life in Transition Survey-III, collected in 32 countries in Eurasia (N = 41,977), in logistic regression, we show that descendants of people who experienced forced displacement as a result of World War II are more likely to report an intention to migrate than people in similar circumstances but without this kind of family experience. Our findings support the contention that migration experience leads to the accumulation of ‘family migration capital’ that is passed across generations and highlight the long-lasting consequences of forced displacement, happening on a large scale globally nowadays, for future voluntary migration flows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Sexually transmitted infections among pregnant Syrian refugee women seeking antenatal care in Lebanon.
- Author
-
Fahme, Sasha A, Fakih, Iman, Ghassani, Ali, El-Nakib, Mostafa, Abu-Raddad, Laith J, Klausner, Jeffrey D, and Mumtaz, Ghina R
- Subjects
- *
SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *SYRIAN refugees , *WOMEN refugees , *PRENATAL care , *SYPHILIS , *TRICHOMONIASIS , *WOMEN'S hospitals , *NUCLEIC acid amplification techniques - Abstract
This article discusses a study that examined the prevalence of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among pregnant Syrian refugee women seeking antenatal care in Lebanon. The study found that there were significant sociodemographic differences between urban and rural settings, with women in rural areas having a higher risk of residing in a refugee camp, never being enrolled in school, and being in a polygamous marriage. The research found a low prevalence of STIs, with only two cases of chlamydia and one case of trichomoniasis detected. The findings suggest that pregnant Syrian refugee women in Lebanon have a lower prevalence of STIs compared to women in other Middle Eastern and North African countries, but further research is needed to understand the burden of other STIs among this population. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Forced displacement in Ukraine: understanding the decision-making process.
- Author
-
Tarkhanova, Oleksandra and Pyrogova, Daryna
- Subjects
- *
FORCED migration , *RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- , *REFUGEES , *UKRAINIANS - Abstract
The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 resulted in millions of people being internally displaced and seeking refuge abroad. European countries responded with favorable socio-legal conditions and a welcoming political climate. In this paper, we are interested in how people make and rationalize their decisions and destination choices following forced displacement. The paper sheds light on the particular conditions under which Ukrainians made their migration decisions and illustrates how this case of displacement allows focusing on the decision-making process when many external constraints faced by other migrant populations are absent. The analysis draws on recently conducted qualitative interviews with internally displaced people and those displaced to several European countries. The study shows how displaced people exercise agency through migration-related decisions and choices based on specific rationalities, which contributes to the discussion on the rigid binary between forced and voluntary migration. The paper adapts the threshold approach to migration decision-making for the investigation of war-driven displacement and shows how it highlights the role of timing and affect in the decision- making process as well as its relational nature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Collective safety-making as empowerment in a women and girl safe space in Lebanon.
- Author
-
Nasr, Hala
- Subjects
- *
GAZE , *WOMEN'S empowerment , *FORCED migration , *SYRIANS , *GENDER-based violence - Abstract
The gendered displacement experiences of Syrian women and girls have been a significant focus of both the academic and development and humanitarian gaze. In response, humanitarian and development organisations have increasingly implemented women and girl safe spaces. Yet, little is known about Syrian women's experiences within them, nor the structures and practice shaping those experiences. Drawing on feminist ethnographic fieldwork in a women and girl safe space in the Beqaa valley in Lebanon, I explore Syrian women's experiences of at-homeness, disclosure, sharing, and alternative futures in relation to the various safety-making practices and structures in the women and girl safe space. My findings highlight the potential for women and girl safe spaces to counteract the everyday isolation and hardship forcibly displaced women face, as well as helping to build the emotional safety and community that they need to navigate forced displacement and strive towards transformative change. I conclude that additional research on the practices and structures that enable collective safety-making and empowerment is imperative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Rereading the Past, Imagining Just Futures: A Generative Method of Historicizing Forced Displacement in Children’s Literature.
- Author
-
Strekalova-Hughes, Ekaterina, Peterman, Nora, and Minaya, Richard M.
- Subjects
- *
CHILDREN'S literature , *FORCED migration , *SOCIAL sciences education , *CRITICAL literacy , *TEACHER educators , *CONTENT analysis - Abstract
Based on critical content analyses of picturebooks about children who have sought refuge, we outline a scaffolded method for social studies teachers and teacher educators to historicize forced displacement in children’s literature. The method integrates critical literacy, culturally sustaining pedagogies, and inquiry-based social studies frameworks to work toward anti-racist decolonizing stances in education. Drawing from excerpts of representative picturebooks, we share generative questions and instructional resources that invite both teachers and students to investigate the historical and sociopolitical contexts of these narratives, and to deliberately construct counter-narratives, challenging underlying values and assumptions that reproduce persistent hierarchies of power. A generative method of historicizing forced displacement in children’s literature aims to nurture critical understanding of geopolitical interconnectedness of countries and cultures, and to develop a sense of shared responsibility for preventing and addressing forced displacement as a collective humanitarian injustice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. El desplazamiento forzado como proceso acumulativo de violencias: una propuesta analítica.
- Author
-
DURIN, SÉVERINE
- Subjects
FORCED migration ,POLITICAL refugees ,MILITARISM ,VIOLENCE ,TEENAGERS - Abstract
Copyright of Desacatos is the property of Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropologia Social and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
46. WHO’s end of TB targets: unachievable by 2035 without addressing under nutrition, forced displacement, and homelessness: trend analysis from 2015 to 2022.
- Author
-
Ayenew, Birhanu, Belay, Dawit Misganaw, Gashaw, Yegoraw, Gimja, Wondimu, and Gardie, Yimenu
- Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a significant global health challenge, despite the World Health Organization (WHO) actively working towards its eradication through various initiatives and programs. Undernutrition, forced displacement, and homelessness worsen TB's burden and challenge control efforts; however, there is still no adequate research that shows the trend of these underlying factors to attain the WHO's ambitious TB targets. So, this study aims to analyze the trend analysis of these underlying factors worldwide from 2015 to 2022 and their impact on the feasibility and implications of reaching the End TB targets by 2035. We utilized international databases, including UNHCR, FAO, and WHO reports, as secondary data sources. Data were extracted chronologically from 2015 to 2022 to illustrate trends in undernutrition, forced displacement, and homelessness on a global level. This trend analysis reveals that undernutrition, forced displacement, and homelessness have worsened over time. Undernutrition rose from 8.4 to 9.8% globally between 2015 and 2021, affecting 22.7 million additional individuals each year. In 2022, undernutrition affected 735 million people globally. Africa (21.9%) and Asia (10.6%) had the highest rates, while Western Europe and North America had lower rates than the global average: 3.4% and 2.5%, respectively. Similarly, the global rate of forced displacement increased from 65.1 million people in 2015 to 108.4 million in 2022, a 21% increase from 2021. This means that an extra 19 million people were displaced in 2021. Globally, homelessness, affecting 1.6 billion people, has worsened over time. Despite being a highly vulnerable group to TB, homeless individuals are often neglected in TB control efforts. Our findings underscore the critical importance of addressing undernutrition, forced displacement, and homelessness in achieving the World Health Organization's ambitious End TB targets by 2035, as highlighted through trend analysis from 2015 to 2022. Implementing policies focusing on nutrition, stable housing, and the challenges faced by displaced populations is imperative for progress toward a TB-free world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. "It opened a new door for me": A qualitative study of forcibly displaced parents' experiences of an attachment-based parenting program.
- Author
-
Kristen, Anna, Moretti, Marlene M, and Osman, Fatumo
- Subjects
- *
QUALITATIVE research , *SELF-efficacy , *RESEARCH funding , *ATTACHMENT behavior , *PARENT attitudes , *PARENTING , *FATHER-child relationship , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
The aim of the study was to explore forcibly displaced parents' experiences of how an online attachment-based parenting program (eConnect) impacted their relationships with their teens. Data was collected from four focus group discussions with 28 parents who participated in the eConnect program. Data was analyzed using network thematic analysis. A global theme emerged from the analysis: Strengthened Parent-Teen Relationships. Four underpinning organizing themes described the process through which the parent-teen relationship was strengthened: Knowledge Served as the Foundation for Change, Increased Parental Self-Efficacy, Improved Emotional Attunement Facilitates Dyadic Affect Regulation, and Shifted Power Dynamics and Emerging Mutual Parent-Teen Partnership. Findings suggest that eConnect is promising intervention for strengthening parent-teen relationships and supporting forcibly displaced families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. "It will always be Temporary ": A qualitative study of Syrian young adults expressing histories of collective violence and forced displacement in participatory theatre.
- Author
-
de Smet, Sofie, Rousseau, Cécile, Stalpaert, Christel, and De Haene, Lucia
- Subjects
- *
WOUNDS & injuries , *VIOLENCE , *MENTAL health , *RESEARCH funding , *QUALITATIVE research , *INTERVIEWING , *SYRIANS , *RACISM , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *REFUGEES , *WELL-being - Abstract
Given the increased prevalence of mental health problems in Syrian refugee communities, there have been efforts to develop adequate mental health care for their well-being. Herein, clinical literature is increasingly emphasizing the importance of locating refugees' healing at the nexus of personal and social realities, understanding the process of trauma narration within social restorative spaces of witnessing and communal support. Alongside this debate, there is growing interest in the relevance of participatory theatre for refugees. This innovative approach understands how voicing narratives of life histories within a broader social sphere may support personal and socio-political transformation. In this article, we aim to further the understanding of participatory theatre's relevance to these issues, focusing on the reparative dimensions of trauma narration. Based on a case study of a theatre project with Syrian young adults resettled in Belgium, we explore the different ways participants expressed experiences of collective violence and displacement in dialogue with each other, their diasporic and home communities, and their host society, and consider how these processes relate to their construction and meaning and coping with trauma. In a final section, we discuss the implications of our findings, raising questions about the value of participatory theatre as a reparative space and outlining suggestions to introduce and mobilize reparative modes of trauma narration in therapeutic practices in refugee trauma care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The demand for welfare institutions in refugee camps
- Author
-
Md. Mahmudur Rahman Bhuiyan
- Subjects
protracted refugee camp ,welfare institutions ,forced displacement ,the welfare state ,social protection ,Social Sciences - Abstract
Long-term encampment has become a reality for a large portion of the forcibly displaced population of the contemporary world, given the inadequacies and limitations of the conventional durable solutions to forced displacement. However, encampment is principally a temporary arrangement that prevents long-term programming in camps, making long-term encampment contradictory and an arena of uncertainty, misery, and despair for the camp dwellers. It is rather more rational to admit long-term encampment as a reality and act on it as it involves unjustifiable humanitarian costs. The paper calls for thinking beyond the conventional practices and focusing on the wellbeing of the encamped population from a life-course perspective. It proposes a framework for building welfare institutions in refugee camps.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Mental Health and Psychosocial Support for Forcibly Displaced People: Insights From Slovenia
- Author
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Maja Gostič
- Subjects
mental health ,psychosocial support ,forced displacement ,language ,intercultural mediation ,Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration ,JV1-9480 - Abstract
The article explores the current state of mental health and psychosocial support for forcibly displaced people residing in Slovenia, as they are a marginalized group of special concern and need of support in an intercultural setting. The study collected information through semi-structured interviews with fifteen experts working with forcibly displaced people. The findings encompass specifics, current problems, and what needs to be improved in the field, providing examples of good practices. They underscore the significance of empowerment in an intercultural context and reveal potential challenges linked to state disinterest and inadequate financial support for required services.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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