Informing Durable Solutions for Internal Displacement in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan

Understanding forced displacement and developing effective solutions requires closing several critical gaps in the data. With forced displacement rising worldwide, the body of work on displacement is growing rapidly. Data on internally displaced persons (IDPs) are particularly problematic, as the distinction between IDPs and internal migrants are not consistent across countries, and as the presence and number of IDPs is often politicized. While efforts have been made to create standardized frameworks for collecting quantitative data on forced displacement, important data gaps persist. This study helps to close data gaps by using micro-level data to profile IDPs. The report uses micro-data, defined as individual and household-level data that is collected directly through personal interviews. Comprehensive micro-data surveys cover IDP populations in four countries in Sub Saharan Africa: Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan. The micro-data surveys represent IDPs, refugees, and non-displaced populations. The analysis is guided by the durable solutions indicator framework while the policy insights focus on overcoming displacement-induced vulnerability. The analysis examines the demographic structure of IDP and resident populations and draws on reasons triggering displacement.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019-04-18
Subjects:DISPLACED POPULATION, INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSON, REFUGEES, HUMAN RIGHTS, LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION, SECONDARY EDUCATION, PRIMARY EDUCATION, FORCED DISPLACEMENT, INEQUALITY, HOST COMMUNITY, LABOR SKILLS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/968141557465726421/Volume-B-Country-Case-Studies
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/32626
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spelling dig-okr-10986326262024-08-07T19:09:41Z Informing Durable Solutions for Internal Displacement in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan Country Case Studies World Bank Group DISPLACED POPULATION INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSON REFUGEES HUMAN RIGHTS LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION SECONDARY EDUCATION PRIMARY EDUCATION FORCED DISPLACEMENT INEQUALITY HOST COMMUNITY LABOR SKILLS Understanding forced displacement and developing effective solutions requires closing several critical gaps in the data. With forced displacement rising worldwide, the body of work on displacement is growing rapidly. Data on internally displaced persons (IDPs) are particularly problematic, as the distinction between IDPs and internal migrants are not consistent across countries, and as the presence and number of IDPs is often politicized. While efforts have been made to create standardized frameworks for collecting quantitative data on forced displacement, important data gaps persist. This study helps to close data gaps by using micro-level data to profile IDPs. The report uses micro-data, defined as individual and household-level data that is collected directly through personal interviews. Comprehensive micro-data surveys cover IDP populations in four countries in Sub Saharan Africa: Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan. The micro-data surveys represent IDPs, refugees, and non-displaced populations. The analysis is guided by the durable solutions indicator framework while the policy insights focus on overcoming displacement-induced vulnerability. The analysis examines the demographic structure of IDP and resident populations and draws on reasons triggering displacement. 2019-10-25T18:58:43Z 2019-10-25T18:58:43Z 2019-04-18 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/968141557465726421/Volume-B-Country-Case-Studies https://hdl.handle.net/10986/32626 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic DISPLACED POPULATION
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSON
REFUGEES
HUMAN RIGHTS
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY EDUCATION
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
INEQUALITY
HOST COMMUNITY
LABOR SKILLS
DISPLACED POPULATION
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSON
REFUGEES
HUMAN RIGHTS
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY EDUCATION
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
INEQUALITY
HOST COMMUNITY
LABOR SKILLS
spellingShingle DISPLACED POPULATION
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSON
REFUGEES
HUMAN RIGHTS
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY EDUCATION
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
INEQUALITY
HOST COMMUNITY
LABOR SKILLS
DISPLACED POPULATION
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSON
REFUGEES
HUMAN RIGHTS
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY EDUCATION
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
INEQUALITY
HOST COMMUNITY
LABOR SKILLS
World Bank Group
Informing Durable Solutions for Internal Displacement in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan
description Understanding forced displacement and developing effective solutions requires closing several critical gaps in the data. With forced displacement rising worldwide, the body of work on displacement is growing rapidly. Data on internally displaced persons (IDPs) are particularly problematic, as the distinction between IDPs and internal migrants are not consistent across countries, and as the presence and number of IDPs is often politicized. While efforts have been made to create standardized frameworks for collecting quantitative data on forced displacement, important data gaps persist. This study helps to close data gaps by using micro-level data to profile IDPs. The report uses micro-data, defined as individual and household-level data that is collected directly through personal interviews. Comprehensive micro-data surveys cover IDP populations in four countries in Sub Saharan Africa: Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan. The micro-data surveys represent IDPs, refugees, and non-displaced populations. The analysis is guided by the durable solutions indicator framework while the policy insights focus on overcoming displacement-induced vulnerability. The analysis examines the demographic structure of IDP and resident populations and draws on reasons triggering displacement.
format Report
topic_facet DISPLACED POPULATION
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSON
REFUGEES
HUMAN RIGHTS
LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY EDUCATION
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
INEQUALITY
HOST COMMUNITY
LABOR SKILLS
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Informing Durable Solutions for Internal Displacement in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan
title_short Informing Durable Solutions for Internal Displacement in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan
title_full Informing Durable Solutions for Internal Displacement in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan
title_fullStr Informing Durable Solutions for Internal Displacement in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan
title_full_unstemmed Informing Durable Solutions for Internal Displacement in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan
title_sort informing durable solutions for internal displacement in nigeria, somalia, south sudan, and sudan
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019-04-18
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/968141557465726421/Volume-B-Country-Case-Studies
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/32626
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