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FMr 52 - Telling it like it is

Series
Thinking ahead: displacement, transition, solutions (Forced Migration Review 52)
Embed
Oral histories provide a means to productively include forcibly displaced people in the work and practices of those looking for solutions for displacement crises.

Episode Information

Series
Thinking ahead: displacement, transition, solutions (Forced Migration Review 52)
People
Tammi Sharpe
Elias Schneider
Keywords
fmr
forced migration review
refugee
forced migrant
asylum seeker
asylum
refugee studies
Department: Refugee Studies Centre
Date Added: 12/07/2016
Duration: 00:05:31

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FMR 52 - Somalia-Yemen links: refugees and returnees

Series
Thinking ahead: displacement, transition, solutions (Forced Migration Review 52)
Embed
Many of the hundreds of thousands of Somali refugees to whom Yemen offered prima facie refugee status over the decades are having to return as a result of the fighting in Yemen.

Episode Information

Series
Thinking ahead: displacement, transition, solutions (Forced Migration Review 52)
People
Maimuna Mohamud
Keywords
fmr
forced migration review
refugee
forced migrant
asylum seeker
asylum
yemen
somalia
Department: Refugee Studies Centre
Date Added: 12/07/2016
Duration: 00:05:52

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FMR 52 - A role for market analysis

Series
Thinking ahead: displacement, transition, solutions (Forced Migration Review 52)
Embed
Securing refugees’ access to work opportunities would help to ameliorate the problems associated with a primarily humanitarian response.

Episode Information

Series
Thinking ahead: displacement, transition, solutions (Forced Migration Review 52)
People
Diana Essex
Jessica Therkelsen
Anna Wirth
Keywords
fmr
forced migration review
refugee
forced migrant
asylum seeker
asylum
economy
refugee skills
Department: Refugee Studies Centre
Date Added: 12/07/2016
Duration: 00:03:17

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FMR 52 - Family allowance extended to refugees in Brazil

Series
Thinking ahead: displacement, transition, solutions (Forced Migration Review 52)
Embed
The Brazilian government has extended an allowance, which was created to assist poor Brazilian families, to refugees.

Episode Information

Series
Thinking ahead: displacement, transition, solutions (Forced Migration Review 52)
People
Lilian Yamamoto
Keywords
fmr
forced migration review
refugee
forced migrant
asylum seeker
asylum
brazil
Department: Refugee Studies Centre
Date Added: 12/07/2016
Duration: 00:04:48

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HIP2015, Session: Humanitarian Innovation and The Military

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
Embed
Parallel session: Humanitarian Innovation and the Military 18 July 2015, 11:00-12:30, 1st Panel Room.
Nathaniel Raymond, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative, James Ryan, University of London. Chair: Josiah Kaplan, Humanitarian Innovation Project.
Military and humanitarian actors increasingly interact across a range of contexts, from natural disaster response to complex emergencies. To date, however, sensitive but important questions surrounding knowledge creation, diffusion, and exchange between both communities remain under-explored, both in debates on humanitarian innovation and humanitarian civil-military coordination. This panel seeks to prompt critical discussion around a sensitive topic by examining how innovative forms of knowledge are created, diffused, and exchanged between military and humanitarian space.
How do aid workers learn, adapt, and 'rebrand' military innovations for civilian use? To what degree are military actors adapting humanitarian concepts and practices for their own use? What sensitivities and dilemmas do such interactions pose for both humanitarian practice and principles?
This discussion will be grounded in concrete case studies drawn from medical humanitarianism and emerging approaches to networked technologies such as remote sensing and mapping.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
People
Nathaniel Raymond
James Ryan
Josiah Kaplan
Keywords
law
politics
humanitarianism
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 12/07/2016
Duration: 01:19:16

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HIP2015, Session: Understanding Humanitarian Innovation In Resettlement Contexts

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
Embed
Parallel session: Understanding Humanitarian Innovation in Resettlement Contexts, 18 July 2015, 11:0--12:30, 2nd Panel Room.
Gavin Ackerly, Asylum Seeker Resource Centre Innovation Hub: ‘Innovative ways of creating resource rich networks to support successful refugee resettlement’, Faith Nibbs, Southern Methodist University: ‘Innovative Strategies: How refugees have career-laddered in the US’, Eleanor Ott, Oxfam GB: ‘‘Forced’ innovation: A case study of US refugee resettlement’, Carrie Perkins, Southern Methodist University: ‘The Road to Resettlement: Transitions from the Thai-Burma border to Dallas, Texas’. Chair: Naohiko Omata, Humanitarian Innovation Project
This panel will consider how the concept of humanitarian innovation can apply to refugees who have been resettled to third countries. The first presentation will introduce a purpose-built e-mentoring and networking project which connects refugees to industry professionals, small business mentors and peer groups in order to give refugees the opportunity to connect deep within mainstream networks, reducing reliance on service agencies and increasing opportunities for prosperity. The second presentation will address how refugees career-ladder when their skills don’t easily transfer to the country of resettlement, presenting some of the innovative strategies refugees have used over the past 30 years in the US gathered through ethnographic interviews of the refugee communities of Dallas, TX area. The third presentation will explore how resettled refugees use and build their own networks to relocate, acquire employment, and find economic and social support, presenting qualitative and quantitative data on resettled refugee livelihood adaptation from findings of research with resettled refugees, practitioners, and policymakers. The fourth presentation will use qualitative interviews from refugees both preparing for resettlement and those who have already made the transition to life in the U.S to explore the many challenges, struggles and successes encountered along the way.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
People
Gavin Ackerly
Faith Nibbs
Carrie Perkins
Naohiko Omata
Keywords
humanitarianism
aid
politics
law
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 12/07/2016
Duration: 01:08:25

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HIP2015, Session: Facilitating Bottom-Up Innovation

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
Embed
Parallel session: Facilitating Bottom-Up Innovation, 18 July 2015, 13:34-15:15, 2nd Panel Room
Gavin Ackerly, Asylum Seeker Resource Centre Innovation Hub, Robert Hakiza, Young African Refugees for Integral Development (YARID) Uganda, Avila Kilmurray, Global Fund for Community Foundations, Olivia O’Sullivan, Innovation Hub, DFID, Amplify Project. Chair: Louise Bloom, Humanitarian Innovation Project.
This session centres on the fact that the humanitarian sector still has a lot to learn about fully engaging with crisis-affected
communities in innovation practice. However several initiatives have started to support communities’ skills and ideas for new humanitarian solutions. Through a lively conversation with the panel members, this session will introduce the exciting work that has created hubs, funds and other platforms to support community-led innovation around the world. We will learn what some of the successes and challenges have been in facilitating grassroots initiatives, and ask what the future is for more direct involvement of crisis-affected communities in providing innovative solutions to humanitarian challenges. With a panel representing a range of global perspectives we hope to unpack some of the key lessons to good innovation facilitation.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
People
Gavin Ackerly
Robert Hakiza
Avila Kilmurray
Olivia O’Sullivan
Keywords
politics
law
humanitarianism
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 12/07/2016
Duration: 01:00:28

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HIP2015, Session: Ethics for Technology and Big Data in Humanitarian Innovation

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
Embed
Parallel session: Ethics for Technology and Big Data in Humanitarian Innovation 17 July 2015, 14:00-15:30, 1st Panel Room.
Nathaniel Raymond, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative’s Signal Program: ‘Applying Humanitarian Principles to the Collection and Use of Digital Data in order to Identify and Mitigate Potential Risks to Vulnerable Populations’, Stefan Voigt, DLR Center for Satellite Based Crisis Information, and Josh Lyons, Human Rights Watch: ‘Between transparency and sensitivity: considerations on the use of very high resolution satellite mapping technologies for humanitarian operations and human rights investigations’ Chair: Anaïs Rességuier, Sciences Po Paris.
This panel will discuss ethical issues and risks specific to the application of new and existing technologies and the collection of ‘big data’ for humanitarian purposes. The first presentation will identify potential risk vectors and models of prospective harm that may stem from current data collection practices through digital platforms, which is increasingly for humanitarian practice, and will provide examples of scenarios where this harm may occur and applying commonly accepted sources of humanitarian principles. The second presentation will give an insight in the current and up‐coming state‐of‐the‐art of satellite technology and will stimulate a discussion on how the geospatial community can navigate future policy debates in a balanced and informed way.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
People
Nathaniel Raymond
Stefan Voigt
Josh Lyons
Anaïs Rességuier
Keywords
politics
law
refugees
technology
ethics
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 12/07/2016
Duration: 00:50:04

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HIP2015, Session: Community-based Food Production in Humanitarian Contexts

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
Embed
Parallel session: Community-based Food Production in Humanitarian Contexts 18 July 2015, 13:45-15:15.
Panellists; Mikey Tomkins, CitizenD: ‘Refugee communities in Dallas: Develop community based urban agriculture in Vickery Meadow’
This panel will consider the role of community-based initiatives and innovations for food production as a way of addressing food security issues in refugee and other humanitarian situations. This presentation focuses on the ongoing work of Citizen-D in Dallas, Texas, a project which is in its first year, and aims to create, support and promote urban food growing projects within the refugee communities in Dallas.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
People
Mikey Tomkins
Keywords
refugees
politics
law
humanitarian
food
aid
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 12/07/2016
Duration: 00:16:47

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HIP2015, Session: Humanitarian Innovation: How to balance short-term results with long-term vision?

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
Embed
Parallel session: Humanitarian Innovation: How to balance short-term results with long-term vision? 17 July 2015, 14:00-15:30.
Panellists Kim Scriven, Humanitarian Innovation Fund, Pascal Daudin, ICRC, Johan Karlsson, Better Shelter. Chair: Marpe Tanaka, MSF Sweden Innovation Unit.
For emergency-oriented organisations in the humanitarian sector, responding quickly to rapidly emerging crisis situations is absolutely crucial. However, a major challenge facing humanitarian organizations is how to maintain a balance between addressing short-term needs and building an innovation capability to meet long-term challenges. The emergency-oriented mind-set often leads to prioritization of short-term problem solving and neglects the exploration of long-term challenges and opportunities for innovation. This panel brings together representatives from MSF Sweden Innovation Unit, the Humanitarian Innovation Fund, the ICRC and Better Shelter to discuss how to successfully achieve a balance between the short-term and the long-term, and to explore the role of patience and trust in creating a sustained innovation capability in humanitarian organizations.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
People
Marpe Tanaka
Kim Scriven
Pascal Daudin
Johan Karlsson
Keywords
refugees
humanitarianism
politics
crisis
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 12/07/2016
Duration: 00:46:58

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