Making Lives: Refugee Self-Reliance and Humanitarian Action in Cities

Author(s)
Fiori, J., Rigon, A. (editors)
Publication language
English
Pages
124pp
Date published
01 Jan 2017
Type
Books
Keywords
Livelihoods, Forced displacement and migration, Urban
Countries
Greece, Lebanon, India
Organisations
Save the Children, The Bartlett Development Planning Unit (UCL), Jindal School of International Affairs

This publication presents the results of a one-year research project at the intersection of urban, humanitarian and forced migration studies. As protracted displacement increasingly contributes to urban change and poses a challenge for city governance and infrastructures, this research project focuses on ‘urban-itarian’ settings – cities that are home to a growing number of ‘persons of concern’ (a category that includes refugees and returned refugees, asylum-seekers, IDPs and returned IDPs, stateless people, and others), and increased humanitarian activity. In these contexts, humanitarian organisations provide an additional layer of urban infrastructure, on top of the conventional provisions for protection, basic services, and livelihoods for persons of concern. They face growing pressure from governmental donors to provide more specialised responses to conflicts and disasters that cannot be isolated from wider urban dynamics.