Service Provision Mapping Tool: Urban Refugee ResponseMapping humanitarian and host community organizationsrelevant to GBV prevention and GBV risk mitigation

Publication language
English
Pages
20pp
Date published
01 Jan 2015
Type
Tools, guidelines and methodologies
Keywords
Forced displacement and migration, Host Communities, Refugee Camps, Urban

Today, more than two-thirds of refugees live in urban areas rather than in refugee camps or settlements. They gravitate towards cities for a
variety of reasons, from educational and economic opportunities to improved housing and, in some cases, increased safety. Yet urban refugees
usually live alongside host community urban poor, and with them they experience high levels of unemployment, violence, substandard
shelter, and limited access to resources like potable water, health services, and public transportation.
Urban response requires a new humanitarian model. Rather than building a new infrastructure of services to serve the refugee population, as
is the traditional approach in camps, urban response must try to leverage the wide range of services, resources, and social capital that already
exists in cities. This means working with host governments and host communities to integrate refugees into existing services, from primary
schools to hospitals, and ensuring that host community members also benefit from whatever contributions to these services humanitarian
actors can provide in return.