Media Centre

Submitted by IDMC-Frankie on Mon, 11/18/2019 - 10:52
20 November 2019

On Universal Children’s Day, new research from the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre presents the first regional and national estimates of the numbers of children forced from their homes by conflict and violence. 

At least 17 million children under the age of 18 were living in internal displacement around the world at the end of 2018, more than five million of them under the age of five. Nearly half of the total number are in sub-Saharan Africa, according to a new IDMC report that will be launched on 21 November in Geneva. 

Eight countries have one million or more children displaced by conflict and violence; ranging from Syria, with 2.2 million, through the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Colombia, Somalia, Afghanistan, Nigeria and Yemen, to Ethiopia with one million.  

“Given that just over 40 per cent of all people internally displaced by conflict and violence are under the age of 18, any attempt at preventing or responding to internal displacement should focus on children. Yet, children remain largely invisible in data collection and overlooked in most policy debates on the issue of internal displacement,” said Alexandra Bilak, IDMC’s director. 

In addition to disaggregated figures on displaced children’s age and location, the report presents some of the harmful impacts of internal displacement on children’s security, health and education. A survey conducted by IDMC in Ethiopia in 2019 found clear signs of psychological distress among displaced children. Teachers in a settlement for people seeking refuge from conflict reported that their students were easily upset, responded to situations in a seemingly aggressive way and sometimes fainted from stress. 

“Internally displaced children are at especially high risk of abuse, neglect, illness and poverty. They require dedicated support from their governments. We cannot under-estimate the risk that this represents for future generations,” added Alexandra Bilak.   

The report also looks at policies and practices from around the world to identify options for supporting and protecting internally displaced children. 

Several countries have dedicated part of their national internal displacement policies to children, including; Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Iraq, Kenya, Nepal, Nigeria, Somalia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Uganda, Vanuatu and Yemen. All of these policies include the right to access education without discrimination. Gaps remain, however, as less than half consider the need to remain in their communities, receive essential immunisations, benefit from dedicated means of registration and recognition, and be protected from early marriage and military recruitment.

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development calls for better disaggregation of data by age, sex and other characteristics. The Expert Group on Refugee and IDP Statistics (EGRIS) is soon to publish recommendations on how to improve national statistical capacities on internal displacement. Meanwhile, further global, regional and national estimates can help to raise awareness on the scale and urgency of the issue and monitor progress.

These estimates are based on 53 countries across all five continents for which data was available. They do not include millions more displaced because of disasters, climate change or other causes. 

NOTES TO EDITORS: 

The Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) is the world's authoritative source of data and analysis on internal displacement. Since its establishment in 1998, as part of the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), IDMC has offered a rigorous, independent and trusted service to the international community. Our work informs policy and operational decisions that improve the lives of the millions of people living in internal displacement, or at risk of becoming displaced in the future.  

For interviews please contact:  

Frankie Parrish, IDMC  
Email: frankie.parrish@idmc.ch    
Office: + 41 22 552 36 45  
Mobile: +41 78 630 16 78 

Follow IDMC on social media:  

Facebook: www.facebook.com/InternalDisplacement 
Twitter: @IDMC_Geneva 
 

Publications

November 2019

Following decades of civil war, a comprehensive peace agreement and the subsequent independence of South Sudan in 2011 prompted as many as two million refugees to return to the world’s youngest country. Many, however, were displaced again when internal conflict erupted in December 2013. A temporary reprieve following the signing of a peace agreement in 2015 enabled some to return to their homes, but conflict soon flared up again. A revitalised peace agreement was signed in 2018, but it is unclear whether the latest wave of returns will this time prove sustainable.

This study, which forms part of IDMC’s 'Invisible Majority' thematic series, examines the relationship between internal displacement, cross-border movements and durable solutions in South Sudan. It is based on more than 200 interviews in Bentiu and Juba. 

Publications

November 2019

Internal displacement in the Northern Triangle of Central America (NTCA) is a serious and growing issue. However, the complex drivers and triggers of displacement in the region, many of which overlap or are interlinked, make it difficult to capture reliable data with which to fully gauge its magnitude.

This report presents the current situation in terms of data on internal displacement in the NTCA. Drawing on research and other reports on the topic it highlights the persistent data gaps in El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, and identifies the data needed to capture and understand the phenomenon and inform policy and programming responses.

Download the report in Spanish (PDF, 0.6MB)

Events

Submitted by IDMC-Caressa on Wed, 11/06/2019 - 14:10
November 2019

INVITATION 

Accounting for and supporting children living in internal displacement 

21 November 2019, 14.00 - 15.30

Room XXV, Building E, Palais des Nations

 

There are over 17 million children living in internal displacement because of conflict and violence around the world, not including millions more whose displacement is associated with disasters, climate change or other causes. Children are one of the largest and most vulnerable groups of internally displaced people (IDPs), yet information as essential as how many and where they are, what their specific needs are and what they can contribute to solutions is rarely available. Internally displaced children are twice invisible in global and national data. First, because IDPs of all ages are often unaccounted for. Second, because age-disaggregation of any kind of data is limited, and even more so for IDPs.
 
On Universal Children's Day, IDMC will release the first estimates of the number of children living in internal displacement in 53 countries in a report including key figures by broad age groups, an overview of the impacts children most often experience as a result of internal displacement and examples of good practices and policies to support them.
 
The Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan to the United Nations Office in Geneva and IDMC invite you to a launch event where the main findings from this report will be presented and discussed.
 

Agenda

14:00 Welcoming remarks by Alexandra Bilak, Director of IDMC
14:10 Keynote speech by His Excellency Mr. Nasir Ahmad Andisha, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan to the United Nations Office and other international organizations in Geneva
14:20 Inclusive data and the SDGs: call on the importance of data disaggregation, Tichafara Chisaka, Project Manager for the Inclusive Data Charter
14:30 Key figures from the report on internally displaced children, Christelle Cazabat, Researcher at IDMC
14:40 Why does age-disaggregated data on IDPs matter? The perspective of internally displaced children, Aurélie Lamazière, Senior Humanitarian Advocacy Advisor for Save the Children
14:50 Experiences and challenges collecting age-disaggregated data on internal displacement, Nayana Das, Research Design & Data Manager for REACH
15:00 Exchanges with the audience
15:30     Coffee and networking


Please register here before 15 November 2019 COB.
If you do not have a badge to access the UN premises, please register here.

Geneva, Switzerland

Events

Submitted by IDMC-Frankie on Tue, 11/05/2019 - 12:12
November 2019

Roundtable on Human Mobility
5 November 2019, Palais des Nations, Geneva Room I, 13:00 - 16:15 
#ClimateRightsDialogues

This expert roundtable seeks to provide an opportunity to review recent developments in the area of climate change, human rights and human mobility, the current role of key institutions and processes, as well as their role moving forward. Head of policy and research, Bina Desai, will participate on behalf of IDMC. 

Objectives
● Foster a conversation about the role of key policy processes and address the interplay between human rights in the context of climate change and human mobility.
● Discuss the remaining protection gaps in these areas and the role of key intergovernmental processes and actors to address such gaps.

 

Public briefing: Human Rights, Climate Change, Land and Human Mobility under the Paris Agreement
Palais des Nations, Meeting Room XXI
16:30 - 18:00

This event will reflect on the importance of addressing human rights in climate action, including through the implementation of the Paris Agreement. It will illustrate the importance of a rights-based approach to climate change and climate action, with a focus on two specific themes: land and human mobility.

Objectives
● To consider protection gaps and opportunities to strengthen the protection of human rights in the context of climate change in the context of land and human mobility.
● To reflect on the importance of rights-based approaches to climate change, particularly in relation to land-related issues and human mobility under the Paris Agreement.

Publications

October 2019

War and displacement in Yemen are not primarily urban in nature. Despite the amount of media attention given to key urban battles such as the siege of Taiz and the battle for Hodeidah, nearly 70 per cent of conflict and displacement takes place in rural areas. 

This paper, part of the 'UnSettlement: Urban displacement in the 21st century' thematic series, examines the urban and rural characteristics of displacement in Yemen, including the push and pull factors in both areas. It provides an overview of historical urbanisation trends in the country, and a rural-urban disaggregation of large conflict and displacement datasets from ACLED and IOM. It examines rural and urban displacement patters and assesses host conditions and the status of basic services in urban centres. It looks specifically at the conditions in the cities of Taiz and Aden, as they both create internal displacement and shelter IDPs. It also analyses future intentions and preferences for durable solutions along urban and rural lines.

Events

Submitted by IDMC-Caressa on Tue, 10/29/2019 - 16:49
October 2019

30 - 31 October 2019, Bonn, Germany

Policy makers and academic researchers will meet at the German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE) in Bonn to discuss cutting-edge research and its implications for policy making at the third international research and policy conference 'Linking policies and people: new insights on migration and development'. The event will be an opportunity for participants to exchange on which policy issues require new research and how current research can support future policy making.

This conference is devoted to understanding why people decide to move from their homes (with a particular focus on South-South migration), what effects migration has on the socio-economic development of low- and middle-income countries and how migration is governed in a multi-level policy environment.
 

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Migration and development;
  • Dynamics of international migration governance and the role of regions;
  • National migration policies;
  • Multidimensional drivers of migration;
  • Conflict and displacement;
  • Socio-economic impact on host countries;
  • Cities and migration;
  • Methodological innovations and new data
     

IDMC's head of data and analysis, Justin Ginnetti, will join a panel on 31 October entitled 'The status-quo and the potential of (forced) migration data'. He will be joined by IOM and the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission to discuss displacement data. 

Find the agenda here

Bonn, Germany

Events

Submitted by IDMC-Frankie on Tue, 10/29/2019 - 13:15
November 2019

4 - 9 November, Canberra, Australia

 

Ministers from GEO’s 105 Member governments, business leaders, heads of international non-profits and passionate experts will meet in Canberra for the Group on Earth Observations (GEO) Week 2019 and the GEO Ministerial Summit.

The week’s events will ensure that data about our planet becomes a core input to strategic decision making and key to day-to-day economic, environmental and development decisions. Participants will explore how the integration of Earth observation data into our digital economies is key to driving progress on the big three global policy frameworks: the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the Paris Climate Agreement, and the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction.

IDMC's head of data and analysis, Justin Ginnetti, will join a side-event on Monday 4 November entitled EO for Disaster Risk Reduction. Justin will join representatives from NASA, IFRC, IOM and others to discuss how Earth observations provide innovative approaches for visualising and managing systemic disaster risk, directly enhancing decision making from national to local levels. 

Find out more about GEO, the programme and speakers here. Watch the live-stream below.