Working for Inclusion : Economic Inclusion in Contexts of Forced Displacement

Since 2012, the number of forcibly displaced people has more than doubled, reaching 89.3 million by the end of 2021. Ongoing conflicts, including the war in Ukraine, will result in even larger numbers of forcibly displaced people. The economic and...

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Main Authors: Heisey, Janet, Sánchez, Inés Arévalo, Bernagros, Alexi
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099556006202228844/IDU0abfb964c0c472049740948308daba72f688a
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37575
id okr-10986-37575
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-375752022-09-19T17:23:49Z Working for Inclusion : Economic Inclusion in Contexts of Forced Displacement Heisey, Janet Sánchez, Inés Arévalo Bernagros, Alexi FORCED DISPLACEMENT DISPLACED PEOPLE ECONOMIC INCLUSION WAR IN UKRAINE HUMAN DEVELOPMENT IMPACT OF DISPLACEMENT REFUGEE INCLUSION PROGRAMS INTERNALLY DISPLACED PEOPLE DESIGN OF ECONOMIC INCLUSION PROGRAM SERVICE DELIVERY IMPACT ON HOST COUNTRY Since 2012, the number of forcibly displaced people has more than doubled, reaching 89.3 million by the end of 2021. Ongoing conflicts, including the war in Ukraine, will result in even larger numbers of forcibly displaced people. The economic and human development impacts of forcible displacement present challenges for the people who have been displaced, the communities that host them, and governments that receive them. Governments, humanitarian organizations, and others are using economic inclusion programs as one strategy to increase income and assets and build the resilience of displaced people and host populations living in poverty. An estimated 95 economic inclusion programs are underway in contexts of forced displacement in 45 countries, more than half led by governments. This note examines the experience of economic inclusion programs that serve forcibly displaced people, including internally displaced people, refugees, and their host communities. It also examines the emerging lessons learned in program design and delivery based on new data on the footprint of economic inclusion programs and a review of evidence on forced displacement and economic inclusion programming. 2022-06-21T15:22:43Z 2022-06-21T15:22:43Z 2022-06-15 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099556006202228844/IDU0abfb964c0c472049740948308daba72f688a http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37575 English PEI In Practice;Vol.4 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Report Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic FORCED DISPLACEMENT
DISPLACED PEOPLE
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
WAR IN UKRAINE
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT IMPACT OF DISPLACEMENT
REFUGEE INCLUSION PROGRAMS
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PEOPLE
DESIGN OF ECONOMIC INCLUSION PROGRAM
SERVICE DELIVERY
IMPACT ON HOST COUNTRY
spellingShingle FORCED DISPLACEMENT
DISPLACED PEOPLE
ECONOMIC INCLUSION
WAR IN UKRAINE
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT IMPACT OF DISPLACEMENT
REFUGEE INCLUSION PROGRAMS
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PEOPLE
DESIGN OF ECONOMIC INCLUSION PROGRAM
SERVICE DELIVERY
IMPACT ON HOST COUNTRY
Heisey, Janet
Sánchez, Inés Arévalo
Bernagros, Alexi
Working for Inclusion : Economic Inclusion in Contexts of Forced Displacement
relation PEI In Practice;Vol.4
description Since 2012, the number of forcibly displaced people has more than doubled, reaching 89.3 million by the end of 2021. Ongoing conflicts, including the war in Ukraine, will result in even larger numbers of forcibly displaced people. The economic and human development impacts of forcible displacement present challenges for the people who have been displaced, the communities that host them, and governments that receive them. Governments, humanitarian organizations, and others are using economic inclusion programs as one strategy to increase income and assets and build the resilience of displaced people and host populations living in poverty. An estimated 95 economic inclusion programs are underway in contexts of forced displacement in 45 countries, more than half led by governments. This note examines the experience of economic inclusion programs that serve forcibly displaced people, including internally displaced people, refugees, and their host communities. It also examines the emerging lessons learned in program design and delivery based on new data on the footprint of economic inclusion programs and a review of evidence on forced displacement and economic inclusion programming.
format Working Paper
author Heisey, Janet
Sánchez, Inés Arévalo
Bernagros, Alexi
author_facet Heisey, Janet
Sánchez, Inés Arévalo
Bernagros, Alexi
author_sort Heisey, Janet
title Working for Inclusion : Economic Inclusion in Contexts of Forced Displacement
title_short Working for Inclusion : Economic Inclusion in Contexts of Forced Displacement
title_full Working for Inclusion : Economic Inclusion in Contexts of Forced Displacement
title_fullStr Working for Inclusion : Economic Inclusion in Contexts of Forced Displacement
title_full_unstemmed Working for Inclusion : Economic Inclusion in Contexts of Forced Displacement
title_sort working for inclusion : economic inclusion in contexts of forced displacement
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099556006202228844/IDU0abfb964c0c472049740948308daba72f688a
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37575
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