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New report launched today by the Refugee Studies Centre

 

New report by the Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford, launched today 17 July 2015 at the Humanitarian Innovation Conference, Oxford

Refugee Innovation: Humanitarian Innovation that Starts with CommunitiesThere is a global refugee crisis – there are nearly 60 million displaced people around the world, more than at any time since the Second World War. Creative solutions are urgently needed. Yet rarely has anyone looked at what refugees are doing to help themselves.

A new report, Refugee Innovation, published by the University of Oxford, showcases examples of refugee-led innovation from around the world. Turning constraints into opportunities, refugees are using their skills and creativity to fill gaps left by inadequate international assistance.

Funded by the World Humanitarian Summit, and based on research conducted in Jordan, South Africa, Uganda, Kenya, and the United States, the report showcases human stories of creative problem-solving and entrepreneurship.

In the Za’atari refugee camp in Jordan, home to 83,000 Syrian refugees, for example, refugees are reconfiguring the structure and lay-out of the camp and their homes in order to replicate their pre-war communities. In Johannesburg, Zimbabwean refugees are starting schools for refugees that are producing extraordinary results in high school exams. In Nairobi’s Eastleigh area, alongside refugee entrepreneurship, Eastleighwood film company has emerged, challenged Somali stereotypes.

The report uses the concept of “bottom-up innovation” to highlight the various ways in which refugees, displaced persons, and others in crisis situations innovate and engage in creative problem-solving as individuals. Even in the most challenging of environments, people are able to draw upon their skill-sets in order to adapt to difficult circumstances.

The report has far-reaching implications for humanitarian practice. It shows how rather than relying upon aid hand-outs, refugees might better be assisted by supporting their own creative solutions. This involves providing an enabling environment within which refugees have better access to the internet, microfinance, education, entrepreneurship training, and basic infrastructure.

Professor Alexander Betts, Director of the Refugee Studies Centre at the University of Oxford and a co-author, said:

"There has been an emerging trend in the humanitarian sector towards using the language of innovation. Generally, though, it has focused on how to improve organisational responses. This is important but these 'top-down' approaches sometimes risk marginalizing the creativity and 'bottom-up' innovation of crisis affected communities themselves."

"In this report, we have tried to showcase examples of how refugees and displaced people innovate in their daily lives. Through examples from Uganda, Kenya, Jordan, South Africa and the United States, we highlight the ways in which refugees turn often constraints into opportunities for themselves and others. This, we suggest, has major implications for how we think about humanitarian assistance."

Contact:

Alexander Betts, Director, Refugee Studies Centre, +44 (0)1865 281 727, alexander.betts@qeh.ox.ac.uk

Louise Bloom, Research Officer, Refugee Studies Centre, +44 (0)1865 281 737, louise.bloom@qeh.ox.ac.uk

Tamsin Kelk, Communications Officer, Refugee Studies Centre, + 44 (0)1865 281 707, tamsin.kelk@qeh.ox.ac.uk

Editor’s Notes:

  • Research conducted by the Refugee Studies Centre, at the University of Oxford.
  • Report launch to take place at the Humanitarian Innovation Conference, Keble College, Oxford, 17-18 July. www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/hip2015
  • Research commissioned by the World Humanitarian Summit.
  • The first-ever World Humanitarian Summit will take place in Istanbul on 26-27 May 2016.
  • Alexander Betts is available for interview leading up to 17th July.
  • Quotes can be taken directly from the report.
  • Photos or infographics are available for use on request.
  • Report URL will be www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/refugeeinnovation