Refugee Economies: Rethinking Popular Assumptions

Author(s)
Betts, A. et al.
Publication language
English
Pages
44pp
Date published
20 Jun 2014
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Principles & ethics, Forced displacement and migration, Standards
Countries
Uganda

On World Refugee Day, 20 June 2014, the Humanitarian Innovation Project launches a new report, which aims to challenge the current model of donor state-led assistance, drawing on ground-breaking new research on the economic life of refugees in Uganda. By attempting to understand the economic systems of displaced populations, this report aims to generate new ideas which can turn current humanitarian challenges into sustainable opportunities. The research findings are organised around five popular myths: -that refugees are economically isolated; -that they are a burden on host states; -that they are economically homogenous; -that they are technologically illiterate; -that they are dependent on humanitarian assistance. In each case, it shows that the data challenges or fundamentally nuances each of those ideas. It also shows a refugee community that is nationally and transnationally integrated, contributes in positive ways to the national economy, is economically diverse, uses and creates technology, and is far from uniformly dependent on international assistance.