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forced migration review

Faith and displacement (Forced Migration Review 48)

FMR 48 - Frozen displacement: Kashmiri Pandits in India

In the 1990s nearly 250,000 people were displaced by violence in India. More than 20 years later the question for them is whether the responses to their displacement so far can form the basis for long-term solutions for their protracted displacement.
Faith and displacement (Forced Migration Review 48)

FMR 48 - Public policy to address displacement in Mexico

At hearings of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in November 2013 on the human rights situation in Mexico, the issue of the internally displaced in particular caught my attention.
Faith and displacement (Forced Migration Review 48)

FMR 48 - Reflections from the encampment decision in the High Court of Kenya

Civil society groups are embracing a recent victory in the High Court of Kenya as a reminder of the important role that strategic litigation can play in the enforcement and promotion of refugee rights.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - Humanitarian innovation, humanitarian renewal?

The continued evolution of the humanitarian innovation concept needs a critical engagement with how this agenda interacts with previous and contemporary attempts to improve humanitarian action.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - Innovation and new ways of working across sectors

Humanitarian actors will have to adapt to a changing world but it will not be easy or straightforward. Operations are changing as a result of innovations which bring many improvements but also throw up challenges.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - Innovation for equity in Lebanon

Innovative approaches in Lebanon aim to address, in two very different ways, the particular needs of the most vulnerable among the refugee and host populations.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - Innovation and refugee livelihoods: a historical perspective

It is difficult to speak convincingly of ‘new’ or innovative practices towards refugees, especially in refugee livelihoods assistance, while there remains a significant gap in historical knowledge and institutional memory.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - Entrepreneurship and innovation by refugees in Uganda

In order to make a living, refugees have to be innovative, and refugees in Uganda have contributed tremendously to entrepreneurship and innovation in the country.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - Resettlement and livelihoods innovation in the US

Conversations with multiple stakeholders in the US help to highlight barriers to economic self-sufficiency for resettled refugees and opportunities for innovative approaches.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - UNHCR Ideas: an online platform for change

‘UNHCR Ideas’ aims to enable collaborative problem solving and idea generation among an online community.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - Technology, production and partnership innovation in Uganda

Since 2007 a partnership between UNHCR, the Government of Uganda and ‘MakaPads’ inventor Moses Musaazi has helped provide affordable sanitary pads for thousands of refugee girls and women.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - Learning curves and collaboration in reconceiving refugee settlements

A collaboration between UNHCR, Ennead Architects and Stanford University uses settlement design to promote innovation and further development in the refugee protection model but collaborators initially face a steep learning curve.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - Innovation: what, why and how for a UN organisation

The purpose of innovation is to make humanitarian work more effective and more reflective. We do innovation to improve human lives by doing things better. Innovation, for UNHCR, is a humanitarian imperative to be carried out with partners.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - Introduction: refugees and innovation

Doing innovation well presents challenges for how we can work better together as organisations and with displaced people, and how we can break down traditional barriers between actors – all while upholding ethical principles and protection standards.
Innovation and refugees (Forced Migration Review, supplement 2014)

FMR Innovation and Refugees - From the editors

From the editors
The Syria crisis (Forced Migration Review 47)

FMR 47 Mobility as a solution

Not all those who have gone to Syria's neighbours are registered, nor do all of these people regard themselves as refugees
The Syria crisis (Forced Migration Review 47)

FMR 47 How the crisis is altering women’s roles in Syria

The significance of women as both distributors and recipients has been pivotal to the implementation of humanitarian assistance but also points to the burgeoning of a new social dynamic that has come about as a result of the upheaval caused by the war.
The Syria crisis (Forced Migration Review 47)

FMR 47 The inside story: internal displacement in Syria

With IDPs currently constituting two-thirds of those uprooted by the conflict, the ‘inside story’ of displacement in Syria requires much greater attention.
The Syria crisis (Forced Migration Review 47)

FMR 47 The mental health of Syrian refugee children and adolescents

Mental health services can be key to restoring basic psychological functioning and to supporting resilience and positive coping strategies for children, adolescents and adults.
The Syria crisis (Forced Migration Review 47)

FMR 47 The vulnerability of Palestinian refugees from Syria

While Syrian nationals may eventually return to their home country, the future for Palestinians from Syria is increasingly uncertain. Meanwhile they are more vulnerable, and treated worse, than most other refugees from the Syrian conflict.

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