April 19, 2017 鈥 The world鈥檚 21 million refugees spend on average 10 years away from their homes; the vast-majority (88 percent) seek refuge in developing countries. Most are still living in poverty, unable to work, struggling to afford healthcare, rent and send their children to school. Short-term humanitarian response is no longer enough.
A high-level group of experts led by the Center for Global Development and the 探花精选 is responding to this reality with a new report that outlines new policy recommendations designed to bridge the humanitarian-development divide, so refugees can become self sufficient and contribute to their local economies.
鈥淔谤辞尘&苍产蝉辫;Lebanon to Ethiopia to Nigeria, people who have been forcibly displaced from their homes are not getting the help they need to survive, recover and rebuild their lives,鈥 said David Miliband, CEO and President of the 探花精选. 鈥淐ompacts are a promising way to bring together humanitarian and development tools and resources around collective outcomes鈥攍ike in education and livelihoods鈥攖o achieve meaningful change in the lives of refugees and host community members.鈥
The report details how different partners 鈥 host governments, humanitarian organisations, development agencies, the private sector, civil society 鈥 can work together through innovative agreements called compacts, to give refugees and host communities a chance to thrive together. In 2016, compact agreements brought together the governments of Jordan and Lebanon, the World Bank, and other actors to improve refugees鈥 economic and educational opportunities. By reviewing lessons learned and offering practical recommendations, this report explains how to replicate those models and design effective compacts in other refugee situations.
鈥淭he world is starting to understand that the nature of refugee crises has changed,鈥 said Masood Ahmed, president of the Center for Global Development. 鈥淭he burdens on those who have fled as well as the communities where they seek refuge are greater and more protracted. The policy recommendations in this report can help support the needs of both refugees and their host communities in the short, medium, and long term鈥攁 necessary framework for today鈥檚 refugee reality.鈥