Keyword Archives: internally-displaced persons
Developing a Profiling Methodology for Displaced People in Urban Areas
Increasing numbers of the world’s rural population are moving to urban areas, and refugees, internally displaced people and humanitarian populations are amongst the recently urbanized. UNHCR estimates that almost half of the world’s 10.5 million refugees now reside in urban areas.
Profiling Urban IDPs: How IDPs differ from their non-IDP neighbors in three cities
By Karen Jacobsen. In Khalid Koser and Susan Martin (eds.), The Migration-Displacement Nexus: Concepts, Cases and Responses. Berghahn Books. Forthcoming 2009.
Internal Displacement to Urban Areas: Santa Marta, Colombia
For more than 40 years, Colombians have been subject to chronic violence perpetrated by left-wing guerillas, paramilitaries, government forces, and drug cartels. In the past 20 years, an estimated four million people have been forced to leave their homes. Generally, the pattern of displacement has been within rural areas or to small administrative centers or larger cities. More recently, this pattern has changed, with displacement occurring within city limits or between city centers. This new pattern of intra-urban displacement has been notable since the conflict began to become ‘urbanized’ (primarily in Medellin and Bogota) from around 2000, leading to new forms of conflict and social tension in urban areas.
Internal Displacement to Urban Areas: Abidjan, Cote D’Ivoire
Effective monitoring of IDPs in Abidjan has been hampered by their invisibility. UNFPA and UNHCR carried out surveys in 2005 and 2007 respectively; however, these did not cover all of Abidjan and were not representative. We made Abidjan a case study to address the need for information about IDPs and because the city met our study’s criteria. Initial planning for the survey began in March 2007, and the survey was conducted in June 2007.
Internal Displacement to Urban Areas: Khartoum, Sudan
In recent decades Sudan’s North-South civil war and the conflict in Darfur have generated one of the largest internally displaced populations in the world. A large proportion of these IDPs is found in and around the capital, Khartoum. The Tufts-IDMC study of Khartoum was a pilot for our larger study and was carried out in 2007, two years after the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement. While the CPA raised hopes for the return of IDPs, continuing insecurity, lack of services in areas of return and doubts about the sustainability of the CPA, have slowed the pace of return.
Refugees and IDPs in Peacemaking Processes
By Karen Jacobsen, Helen Young and Abdalmonim Osman. In Contemporary Peacemaking. Palgrave Macmillan 2nd Edition. 2008.
The Implications of HIV-AIDS for the IDPS in Khartoum
Towards a New Intervention. Rahim, H, A. (2007). Report for Oxfam GB- Sudan.
Beating Wives and Protecting Culture: Violent Responses to Women’s Awakening of their Rights
By Khristopher Carlson and Dyan Mazurana. Humanitarian Practice Network, November/December, 2006.
Refugees In Urban Settings
Karen Jacobsen, Guest Editor. Special Issue of Journal of Refugee Studies Vol. 9(3): 273-286. June 2006
Using Microenterprise Interventions to Support the Livelihoods of Forcibly Displaced People: The Impact of a Microcredit Program in IDP Camps in Lira, Northern Uganda
By Karen Jacobsen, Anastasia Marshak, Akua Ofori-Adjei and Jane Kembabazi. Refugee Survey Quarterly. May 2006. (Vol. 25, No. 2, pp. 23-39.)

