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    UID:
    gbv_894307517
    Format: 1 online resource (187 pages)
    ISBN: 9781464809392
    Content: Cover -- Half Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Foreword -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Overview -- A crisis that can be managed -- Working together with humanitarian actors -- At the onset-Taking a new look at prevention and preparedness -- During the crisis-Managing changes for host communities -- During the crisis-Reducing vulnerabilities of the forcibly displaced -- Toward a longer-term solution-Helping to rebuild lives -- Making the most of development finance -- Notes -- 1 How Severe Is the Crisis? -- The crisis in perspective -- Some unexpected characteristics of the crisis -- Insufficient data -- An agenda for better data -- Annex 1A -- Annex 1B -- Notes -- 2 Taking a New Look at Prevention and Preparedness -- To stay or not to stay? Weighing the risks -- What makes people go? -- There is often time to prepare before the crisis -- What happens to those who stay behind? -- An agenda for development actors -- Notes -- 3 Managing Changes for Host Communities -- Initial conditions, shock, and response -- Exacerbating existing challenges: The country-level impact on fragility, social cohesion, and the economy -- Some gain, others lose: Local impacts on jobs and prices -- Strains on local capacity for service delivery -- An agenda for development actors -- Notes -- 4 Reducing the Vulnerabilities of the Forcibly Displaced -- The initial setback: Losses and trauma -- The environment for recovery: Rights, location, and planning horizon -- An agenda for development actors -- Notes -- 5 Rebuilding Lives -- Stay, return, or move on? -- From return to successful return -- Integration in host countries: Location vs. rights -- Integration in high-income countries: A difficult endeavor -- An agenda for development actors -- Notes -- 6 Making the Most of Development Finance -- The main elements of a major international effort.
    Content: The potential for development financing: Maximizing the use of public resources -- The potential for development financing: Leveraging private capital and expertise -- An agenda for development actors -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Boxes -- 1.1 Lessons from economic migration -- 1.2 People move for different reasons -- 1.3 Comparing shares-refugees and economic migrants -- 1.4 Norway has 18,000 refugees or is it 132,000? -- 1.5 The challenges of data collection for IDPs -- 1.6 Estimating the number of affected "hosts" -- 1.7 Another group of concern: Stateless people -- 1.8 Institutionalizing data collection -- 1.9 Open data -- 2.1 A brief overview of the forced displacement prevention agenda -- 2.2 The (imperfect) targeting of violence -- 2.3 Socioeconomic status and displacement strategies -- 2.4 Mixed migration -- 2.5 Socioeconomic impact of forced displacement on countries of origin: How to quantify it? -- 2.6 Using big data to predict economic migration to Australia -- 2.7 Learning from disaster preparedness -- 2.8 Migration and development -- 2.9 Strengthening resilience in Ethiopia -- 3.1 A host country perspective -- 3.2 Terrorism and the displaced-Myths and reality -- 3.3 What is "social cohesion"? -- 3.4 Perceptions and social cohesion -- 3.5 Forced displacement and crime -- 3.6 Refugees as employers in Turkey -- 3.7 The impact of Cuban refugees on Miami's labor market -- 3.8 Camps or country systems? -- 3.9 Regional development -- 3.10 Support for formalizing Syrian refugees in Jordan -- 4.1 Trauma and the displaced: An example from Syria -- 4.2 Institutions -- 4.3 Women, business, and the law -- 4.4 The "Wilton Park Principles"? -- 4.5 Special economic zones in Jordan -- 4.6 Providing education to Syrian refugees in Turkey -- 4.7 Forced displacement and the graduation approach -- 4.8 Supporting psychosocial and post-traumatic care?
    Content: 5.1 An approach based on specific vulnerabilities -- 5.2 The complexities of return and reintegration -- 5.3 From forced displacement to economic migration -- 5.4 Do the forcibly displaced want to return? -- 5.5 The politics of return -- 5.6 Gender and the challenges of return -- 5.7 Return and access to land -- 5.8 Assisting return -- 5.9 Tanzania's integration of Burundians -- 5.10 Does status matter? Lessons from economic migration -- 5.11 ECOW AS and labor migration -- 6.1 In-donor refugee costs -- 6.2 The financing model of development banks -- 6.3 Innovative bonds -- 6.4 Climate investment funds -- 6.5 The World Bank Group Concessional Financing Facility -- 6.6 An example of contingent financing -- 6.7 Guarantees and forced displacement -- 6.8 A precedent: Insurance against natural disasters -- 6.9 Illustrative questions on cost-effectiveness -- 6.10 Exploring new sources of financing -- 6.11 Collective action in providing public goods -- Figures -- O.1 An overview of the forced displacement crisis -- O.2 Shock and response for the host communities -- O.3 The multiple dimensions of vulnerability -- 1.1 A threefold crisis: The global forcibly displaced population -- 1.2 Refugees are only a small share of people on the move -- 1.3 Refugees and IDPs are mainly in low- and middle-income countries -- 1.4 The European Union now has fewer refugees than in the early 1990s -- 1.5 Refugees and IDPs in the world's developing regions -- 1.6 The same 10 conflicts have caused the majority of forced displacement every year since 1991 -- 1.7 Top 15 countries and territories of origin for forced displacement -- 1.8 The same 15 countries have been hosting a majority of refugees every year since 1991 -- 1.9 Refugees typically account for a small share of the host country's population -- 1.10 How many years have refugees spent in exile?
    Content: 1.11 Most refugees live out of camps, and camps are concentrated in Africa and South Asia -- 1.12 The vast majority of IDPs live in individual accommodations -- 1.13 Forced displacement is more urban in middle-income countries, and more rural in low-income countries -- 3.1 Shock and response for the host communities -- 4.1 Number of legal restrictions on women seeking jobs in the 15 largest refugee-hosting countries, 2014 -- 5.1 Exits from UNHCR statistics -- 5.2 Returns of refugees by country -- 5.3 Returns of IDPs by country -- 5.4 Immigrants in selected OECD countries and refugees in key host countries as a share of the total host population -- 5.5 Refugees in high-income countries -- 5.6 Employment rate by immigrant category and duration of stay in European OECD countries, 2008 -- 5.7 Employment by years in Sweden for resettled refugees and approved asylum-seekers, 2007 -- 6.1 Humanitarian assistance -- 6.2 United Nations appeals: Needs and contributions -- 6.3 Share of long-, medium-, and short-term recipients of official humanitarian assistance from OECD-DAC donors -- 6.4 Net ODA expenditures on in-donor refugee costs -- Maps -- O.1 An uneven impact across the world -- 1.1 Main refugee origin countries -- 1.2 Main refugee host countries -- 1.3 Main IDP countries -- Tables -- 1.1 Rating of methodologies -- 1B.1 Forced displacement situations as of end-2015
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781464809385
    Additional Edition: Druck-Ausgabe Erscheint auch als ISBN 9781464809385
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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