Assessing the Impacts and Costs of Forced Displacement : Volume 1. A Mixed Methods Approach

Globally, over 40 million people have been forced to leave or flee their homes due to conflict, violence, and human rights violations either as refugees outside their country of origin or Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). A substantial number live in protracted displacement where return has not been possible.Forced displacement is a humanitarian crisis: but it also produces developmental impacts - short and longer term, negative and positive - affecting human and social capital, economic growth, poverty reduction efforts, environmental sustainability and societal fragility. A prevailing view is that refugees are a burden on the development aspirations of host countries and populations and that negative socio-economic and environmental impacts and costs outweigh the positive contributions (actual or potential) that forcibly displaced people might make. The losses incurred by the displaced populations themselves reinforce perceptions of vulnerability and dependency and thus assumptions of the burden they might impose. This study provides such a methodology. The development and drafting of the methodology and the state of the art literature review was conducted by the refugee studies centre, with valuable and constructive inputs from the partner organizations.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, Elena, Ruiz, Isabel, Vargas-Silva, Carlos, Zetter, Roger
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012-05-01
Subjects:ACCESS TO EMPLOYMENT, ACCESS TO MARKETS, ACCESSIBILITY, ACCOUNTING, AGRICULTURAL WORKERS, ASYLUM, ASYLUM SEEKERS, BORDERS, CHILD LABOUR, CIVIL CONFLICT, CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING, COPING STRATEGIES, COUNTRIES OF ORIGIN, COUNTRY OF ORIGIN, CRIME, CRIME RATES, CULTURAL IDENTITY, DEMAND FOR FOOD, DEVELOPMENT GOALS, DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTIONS, DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES, DISABILITY, DISCRIMINATION, DISEASES, DISPLACED PEOPLE, DISPLACEMENT, DIVORCE, DOMESTIC VIOLENCE, EARLY MARRIAGE, EARLY MARRIAGES, ECONOMIC ANALYSIS, ECONOMIC CONDITIONS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMICS, EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT, EDUCATIONAL LEVELS, EMPLOYMENT, EMPLOYMENT STATUS, ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION, ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS, ENVIRONMENTAL RESOURCES, ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY, ETHNIC CLEANSING, ETHNIC GROUP, ETHNIC GROUPS, EVALUATION PROCESS, EXILE, EXOGENOUS SHOCK, EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE, EXTENDED FAMILY, FAMILY COMPOSITION, FAMILY SIZE, FLOW OF REFUGEES, FOOD INSECURITY, FORCED MIGRATION, GENDER ROLES, GENOCIDE, GOVERNMENT AGENCIES, GOVERNMENT POLICIES, HEALTH MINISTRIES, HIV, HOST COMMUNITIES, HOST COUNTRIES, HOST COUNTRY, HOST GOVERNMENT, HOST POPULATION, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, HOUSING, HUMAN CAPITAL, HUMAN RIGHTS, HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS, HUMAN SECURITY, HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE, IMMIGRANTS, IMPACT OF VIOLENCE, INCOME, INCOME REDISTRIBUTION, INFANT, INFANT MORTALITY, INFLUX OF REFUGEES, INFORMAL ECONOMY, INFORMAL SECTOR, INNOVATION, INSURANCE, INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY, INTERNATIONAL CONVENTIONS, JOBS, KINSHIP, LABOUR, LABOUR FORCE, LABOUR FORCE PARTICIPATION, LABOUR MARKET, LABOUR MARKET OUTCOMES, LABOUR MARKETS, LABOUR SUPPLY, LAND USE, LITERACY RATES, LIVING CONDITIONS, LOCAL COMMUNITIES, LOCAL ECONOMY, LOCAL LABOUR MARKETS, LOCAL POPULATION, MALARIA, MARITAL STATUS, MARKET WAGES, MATERNAL HEALTH, MENTAL HEALTH, MIGRATION, MOVEMENT OF PEOPLE, NATIONAL LEVEL, NATIONAL LEVELS, NATURAL RESOURCES, NUMBER OF REFUGEES, NUTRITION, OCCUPATION, OCCUPATIONS, PERFECT INFORMATION, POLICY DECISIONS, POLICY MAKERS, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POLITICAL RIGHTS, POPULATION CENTRE, POPULATION DENSITY, POPULATION DISPLACEMENT, POPULATION ESTIMATES, PRACTITIONERS, PROSTITUTION, PUBLIC SERVICES, REFUGEE, REFUGEE CAMPS, REFUGEE STUDIES, REFUGEES, REMITTANCES, RENTS, REPATRIATION, RESETTLEMENT, RESOURCE CONSTRAINTS, RESPECT, RURAL AREAS, RURAL POPULATIONS, SELF-RELIANCE, SEX, SEX TRADE, SKILL LEVEL, SKILLED OCCUPATIONS, SMALL BUSINESS, SOCIAL CAPITAL, SOCIAL CHANGE, SOCIAL CHANGES, SOCIAL FACTORS, SOCIAL GROUPS, SOCIAL IMPACTS, SOCIAL INDICATORS, SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE, SOCIAL MOBILITY, SOCIAL NETWORKS, SPECIES, SUBSTANCE ABUSE, SUBSTITUTION EFFECTS, SUPPLIERS, TRAINING COSTS, TRANSPORTATION, UNEMPLOYED, UNEMPLOYMENT, UNEMPLOYMENT RATE, UNEMPLOYMENT RATES, URBAN AREAS, VULNERABILITY, WAGE RATES, WAGES, WAR, WORKER, WORKERS, WORKING CONDITIONS, XENOPHOBIA,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/05/17817146/assessing-forced-displacement-mixed-methods-approach
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/16096
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Summary:Globally, over 40 million people have been forced to leave or flee their homes due to conflict, violence, and human rights violations either as refugees outside their country of origin or Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). A substantial number live in protracted displacement where return has not been possible.Forced displacement is a humanitarian crisis: but it also produces developmental impacts - short and longer term, negative and positive - affecting human and social capital, economic growth, poverty reduction efforts, environmental sustainability and societal fragility. A prevailing view is that refugees are a burden on the development aspirations of host countries and populations and that negative socio-economic and environmental impacts and costs outweigh the positive contributions (actual or potential) that forcibly displaced people might make. The losses incurred by the displaced populations themselves reinforce perceptions of vulnerability and dependency and thus assumptions of the burden they might impose. This study provides such a methodology. The development and drafting of the methodology and the state of the art literature review was conducted by the refugee studies centre, with valuable and constructive inputs from the partner organizations.