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The 6.45 million displaced people inside Syria make this the largest IDP crisis in the world, with possibly also the largest number of people who are ‘trapped’. In addition, the number of refugees from Syria continues to increase. The international community has an opportunity to set up, from now, an effective response to what will clearly become protracted displacement. These 20 articles discuss how to increase protection for the displaced and how to shape assistance to both the displaced and their ‘hosts’.
See more at: http://www.fmreview.org/syria
# | Episode Title | Description | People | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
21 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 Mobility as a solution | Not all those who have gone to Syria's neighbours are registered, nor do all of these people regard themselves as refugees | Lucas Oesch | 02 Dec 2014 |
20 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 How the crisis is altering women’s roles in Syria | The significance of women as both distributors and recipients has been pivotal to the implementation of humanitarian assistance but also points to the burgeoning of a new social dynamic that has come about as a result of the upheaval caused by the war. | Zerene Haddad | 02 Dec 2014 |
19 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 The inside story: internal displacement in Syria | With IDPs currently constituting two-thirds of those uprooted by the conflict, the ‘inside story’ of displacement in Syria requires much greater attention. | Erin Mooney | 02 Dec 2014 |
18 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 The mental health of Syrian refugee children and adolescents | Mental health services can be key to restoring basic psychological functioning and to supporting resilience and positive coping strategies for children, adolescents and adults. | Leah James, Annie Sovcik, Ferdinand Garoff, Reem Abbasi | 02 Dec 2014 |
17 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 The vulnerability of Palestinian refugees from Syria | While Syrian nationals may eventually return to their home country, the future for Palestinians from Syria is increasingly uncertain. Meanwhile they are more vulnerable, and treated worse, than most other refugees from the Syrian conflict. | Leah Morrison | 02 Dec 2014 |
16 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 The impact of displacement on disabled, injured and older Syrian refugees | In contexts of displacement it is critical to recognise that some groups in the population may require specific attention. Awareness of these needs has major consequences for the types of services required, and the way they are delivered. | Marcus Skinner | 02 Dec 2014 |
15 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 Gender, conscription and protection, and the war in Syria | The struggles endured by men who remain inside Syria and the obstacles faced by others who choose to remove themselves from the fighting by fleeing the country demonstrate a need to redefine classic conceptions of vulnerability. | Rochelle Davis, Abbie Taylor, Emma Murphy | 02 Dec 2014 |
14 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 If Israel accepted Syrian refugees and IDPs in the Golan Heights | Could re-opening the Golan Heights to Syrians displaced by the conflict be a beneficial option for those fleeing the Syrian conflict and for Israel’s relations with its north-eastern neighbour? | Crystal Plotner | 02 Dec 2014 |
13 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 For beneficiary-led protection programming in Jordan | Despite the humanitarian community’s clear focus on addressing the protection concerns of displaced Syrians, in Jordan the beneficiaries of many protection programmes have had limited influence on the shape of the protection response to date. | Sinead McGrath | 02 Dec 2014 |
12 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 A duty and a burden on Jordan | It is important to Jordan both that it protects its national identity and maintains its cultural obligations, and that it faces up to its humanitarian obligations. | Saleh Al-Kilani | 02 Dec 2014 |
11 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 Protection challenges of mobility | It is easy to say that people fleeing Syria should stay in camps or satellite cities but people move on for a variety of reasons, and programmes and services must adapt to assist them. | Melissa Phillips, Kathrine Starup | 02 Dec 2014 |
10 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 Refugee by association | Many Syrians, even when they have not been individually singled out, meet the refugee criteria on the grounds of being at risk of persecution because of a perceived association, in the broadest sense, with one of the parties to the conflict. | Blanche Tax | 02 Dec 2014 |
9 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 Limited legal status for refugees from Syria in Lebanon | Having limited legal status has direct negative consequences for Syrian refugees’ access to protection and assistance during their stay in Lebanon. Limited legal status also increases the risks of abuse and exploitation. | Dalia Aranki, Olivia Kalis | 02 Dec 2014 |
8 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 Coping strategies among self-settled Syrians in Lebanon | Refugees in Lebanon prefer living outside camps, where they can influence their situation. | Cathrine Thorleifsson | 02 Dec 2014 |
7 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 Refugee activists’ involvement in relief effort in Lebanon | A cadre of educated middle-class Syrian refugees dedicated to improving conditions for Syrians at home and in Lebanon are building a civil society in exile but face obstacles to consolidating their presence and becoming more effective. | Frances Topham Smallwood | 02 Dec 2014 |
6 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 The role of host communities in north Lebanon | Research conducted in Akkar, north Lebanon, suggests that the role played by the host community demonstrates good local capacity which should be built on to encourage further civic engagement and empowerment. | Helen Mackreath | 02 Dec 2014 |
5 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 Syrians contributing to Kurdish economic growth | The circumstances for both successful livelihoods programming for refugees and for contributing to the local economy are present in the Kurdish region of Iraq. | Anubha Sood, Louisa Seferis | 02 Dec 2014 |
4 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 The refugee crisis in Lebanon and Jordan: the need for economic development spending | The most effective way to tackle the Syrian refugee crisis is for neighbouring states to assume a leading role in development spending, infrastructure upgrading and job creation, particularly in the most underdeveloped regions of those countries. | Omar Dahi | 02 Dec 2014 |
3 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 Development and protection challenges of the Syrian refugee crisisf | The Syria Regional Response Plan 6 (RRP6) 2014 provides an increased focus on early recovery, social cohesion interventions and a transition from assistance to development-led interventions, alongside the continuing large-scale humanitarian assistance. | Roger Zetter, Heloise Ruaudel | 02 Dec 2014 |
2 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 Foreword: the inheritance of loss | As the civil war in Syria drags on, the scale of displacement continues to increase. While the crisis may be prolonged, refugees and IDPs need support now for their protection, their recovery, and both their immediate and their long-term prospects. | Nigel Fisher | 02 Dec 2014 |
1 | Creative Commons | FMR 47 From the Editors | From the Editors | Marion Couldrey, Maurice Herson | 02 Dec 2014 |