Syrian refugees in Tripoli, Lebanon

Author(s)
Ismail, K., Wilson, C. and Cohen-Fournier, N.
Pages
15pp
Date published
01 Mar 2017
Publisher
The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Assessment & Analysis, Urban

With the goal of understanding immigrant integration, the Refugees in Towns (RIT) project, based at the Feinstein International Center at Tufts University,seeks to explore the dual experience of refugees and the towns into which they move, from the perspective of both the refugees and the town. When refugees move into and settle in a town they change the fabric of social, political, cultural and economic relations, and this fabric of relations similarly influences the refugees’ experience. The RIT project explores this co-evolving process of refugee integration and urban development by focusing on the ‘ground-up’ experience of hosting communities in towns or neighborhoods within large cities. Through a series of cases studies, the project documents urban changes (i.e. the impact on households and communities, on urban service and systems, and on urban governance), and the experience of the refugees themselves—whether and why they have thrived or struggled—with the goal of building a theory of integration based on the relationships between refugees and their host communities.