Media Centre

Submitted by IDMC-Francesca on Wed, 03/13/2019 - 10:02
13 March 2019
Clemence and Sam

 

As part of the Norwegian Refugee Council, IDMC joins with them to mourn the loss of our colleagues Clémence Boutant-Willm and Sam Pegram. Our deepest condolences to their families and friends.

Below is NRC's statement, originally published on 12 March 2019.

It is with great distress that the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) confirms the deaths of two of our colleagues among those killed on the Ethiopian Airlines aircraft that crashed en route to Kenya on Sunday morning.
Clémence Boutant-Willm and Sam Pegram were highly valued and respected members of our team, based in Geneva but working to reach people affected by humanitarian crises around the world. Clémence and Sam were travelling to Nairobi this week to facilitate training for our partners on negotiating humanitarian access. We are feeling this loss acutely.

NRC condoles with the families of Clémence, Sam, and all who lost their lives in Sunday’s tragic accident. We are mindful of the very significant impact of this accident on our colleagues, the humanitarian community, and on people in Ethiopia and Kenya, who may have been adversely affected. 

A note on our colleagues:

Clémence Boutant-Willm was our very warm and incredibly committed Project Manager for Access and Negotiations Capacity Building. Her work with NRC, and other humanitarian organisations before us, promoted principled humanitarian action and safe access to aid for people in crises around the world. She has been a pragmatic, humble and extremely competent colleague; highly principled, ethical and kind. Clémence is an enormous loss to us, both because we valued her professional skill and because we loved her as a person. We grieve her loss and extend deepest sympathies to her husband, daughters, family and friends.

Sam Pegram represented the high-calibre of people drawn to work in our field. He was among our youngest staff, employed as our Humanitarian Policy Assistant and quickly drawn into sophisticated work that used his intellect, insight and agility. Sam came to our team with a passion for the Middle East, obvious talent, and a genuine desire to do good. He made our days so much brighter with his warmth, witty sense of humour, friendliness and enthusiasm. We are devastated by the loss of a thoughtful and capable colleague who had an unquestionably promising future. Sam was exceptional. We feel profoundly sad for his parents, brother, family and friends; we are mourning with them.

Publications

March 2019

Hurricane Ike, the most destructive hurricane in Cuban history, hit the island in September 2008. Ike is estimated to be the costliest storm in Cuba, with material damages alone believed to have cost about $7.3 billion, the equivalent of 12 per cent of the country’ GDP.

This paper assesses further repercussions on the economy, linked to the inability of evacuees and people displaced during and in the aftermath of the cyclone to continue their professional activity. Lost economic production due to displacement in the context of Hurricane Ike is estimated to be $131.7 million, 0.22 per cent of Cuba’s GDP.

This paper is part of IDMC's thematic series "The ripple effect: economic impacts of internal displacement". The series aims to measure the effects of internal displacement on the economic potential of internally displaced people, host communities and societies as a whole, bridging the knowledge gap through innovative research, partnerships with experts and practitioners from a wide range of disciplines and consultations with policy stakeholders concerned with economic development.

Publications

March 2019

In the 2017 Global Report on Internal Displacement, the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) set out to better understand the relationship between internal displacement and cross-border movements. As part of the resulting Invisible Majority thematic series, this report, based on over two hundred interviews with displaced Colombians, examines drivers of displacement and onward movement of internally displaced people (IDPs) within and across borders, provides better understanding of priorities and preconditions for voluntary return, and examine obstacles to durable solutions for returning refugees and IDPs in Colombia. While the report does not set out to assess the successes and failures of the 2016 Peace Agreement, it nonetheless brings to light a number of challenges to its implementation.

Download in Spanish; the executive summary (PDF, 0.2MB) and the full report (PDF, 1.8MB). 

Publications

February 2019

The experience of internally displaced people (IDPs) and their resulting vulnerability, differs significantly across displaced populations. In some contexts, IDPs are exposed to high levels of violence, malnutrition and disease in overcrowded and unsanitary displacement camps. In other cases, they are provided with free social housing and priority access to services.

To call attention to situations of particular concern, highlight key threats to IDPs’ safety and wellbeing, and better measure progress towards finding solutions to internal displacement, IDMC now aims to complement displacement figures with an assessment of displacement severity. By the end of 2019, IDMC aims to provide information on the severity of displacement in about 50 countries affected by conflict displacement. This report outlines the methodology adopted.

Events

Submitted by IDMC-Francesca on Mon, 02/25/2019 - 12:19
March 2019

In the 2017 Global Report on Internal Displacement, IDMC set out to better understand the relationship between internal displacement and cross-border movements. As part of the resulting Invisible Majority thematic series, the new report, based on over two hundred interviews with displaced Colombians, examines drivers of displacement and onward movement of internally displaced people (IDPs) within and across borders, provides better understanding of priorities and preconditions for voluntary return, and examine obstacles to durable solutions for returning refugees and IDPs in Colombia. While the report does not set out to assess the successes and failures of the 2016 Peace Agreement, it nonetheless brings to light a number of challenges to its implementation.

IDMC launched the report on 7 March 2019 at the International Conference Centre in Geneva. After a presentation of IDMC’s findings, a panel of experts responded to a series of questions drawn from the study’s key findings and recommendations.

 

Geneva

Events

Submitted by IDMC-Francesca on Mon, 02/18/2019 - 09:34
February 2019

To mark the 20th anniversary of the Guiding Principles of Internal Displacement, the School of Transnational Governance at the European University Institute has decided to bring together a number of policy makers and scholars for a High Level Policy Dialogue in Florence on the 18th February. The event will seek to examine the implementation of the Guiding Principles and discuss future efforts to address and prevent internal displacement. To identify best practices that could form the basis for future action, and in line with objectives under the GP20 Plan of Action, the event aims to foster the exchange of ideas and strategies between high level experts at both the international and the national levels and at the crossroads between research and practice.

Bina Desai, our head of policy and research, will join the "Framing Internal Displacement" panel on Monday 18 February to discuss how to frame and make the case for acknowledging and addressing internal displacement, particularly to national actors. Doing so is a crucial part of achieving effective solutions to displacement, preventing new displacement and attracting the necessary resources and investments.

More information on the event is available here.

Events

Submitted by IDMC-Francesca on Fri, 02/15/2019 - 11:39
February 2019

Artificial intelligence (AI) is a set of transformative technologies with the potential to greatly aid the development and humanitarian sectors through powerful data analysis.

On 17 February our head of data and analysis Justin Ginnetti will join 'AI for Social Good', a workshop jointly organized by the United Nations Development Programme and the Qatar Center for Artificial Intelligence at the Qatar Computing Research Institute. 

The workshop brings together experts and practitioners from a range of stakeholders, including UN agencies, NGOs, academic institutions and industry partners to present their experience with applying AI to solve real world problems. The workshop will also provide an opportunity to discuss important questions including ethical issues related to how to ensure equal benefits to all and that no one is left behind, technical and legal issues related to data access, and operational issues related to the integration of new technologies into existing workflows and decision making processes.

Justin will discuss how we use AI to detect, map and quantify internal displacement and present our IDETECT and other monitoring tools

More information about the workshop is available here

 

Qatar

Media Centre

Submitted by IDMC-Francesca on Wed, 02/13/2019 - 10:15
13 February 2019

Geneva, 13 February 2019 - First estimates of the financial impact of internal displacement have been released by the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC). The Geneva-based organisation’s new report estimates the average annual economic costs of the consequences of internal displacement on health, shelter, education, security and income. Researchers assessed these costs for eight countries which have recently experienced significant displacement in the context of conflict, disasters, or both. 

The findings reveal the average annual economic impact for each internally displaced person (IDP) ranges from $174 in Somalia to $451 in the Central African Republic (CAR). Taking the average cost per IDP across all assessed countries, $310, and applying it to the total number of IDPs in the world - 40 million as of the end of 2017 – would result in a global financial impact of internal displacement of nearly $13 billion per year.  

Alexandra Bilak, director of IDMC, said: “We have long understood the devastating impact internal displacement can have on the safety and wellbeing of people affected by conflict, violence, disasters and development projects. But internal displacement also places a heavy burden on the economy, by limiting people’s ability to work and generating specific needs that must be paid for by those affected, their hosts, governments or aid providers.” 

While conflict and violence are routine drivers of displacement in Somalia, the most significant trigger during the period studied was drought, which forced hundreds of thousands to flee in search of food, water and work. In CAR, decades of instability have led to a displacement crisis which this research estimates costs, on average, the equivalent of 11 per cent of the country’s GDP each year. 

In all the countries assessed; CAR, Haiti, Libya, the Philippines, Somalia, South Sudan, Ukraine and Yemen, the highest financial burdens come from lost income, support to housing and healthcare. Results also indicate that impacts seem higher in low-income countries than lower-middle or upper-middle income countries.   

The report used publicly available data to assess the costs and losses associated with internal displacement’s most direct consequences on health, shelter, education, security and income. These estimates do not account for longer-term consequences of internal displacement, such as the future reduction of income linked to a displaced child’s inability to access school. The eight countries assessed were chosen for their geographic and economic diversity and availability of data.   

“This new research clearly shows the risk internal displacement represents, not only for human rights and security but also for national development,” added Alexandra Bilak.  

“More data and analysis are needed to further identify where the financial losses are greatest and help governments and aid providers prevent future displacement, as well as respond more efficiently to existing crises.” 

This research was funded by the Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance and the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs. 
 

Notes to editors:
About IDMC: IDMC is the world’s authoritative source of data and analysis on internal displacement. Since our establishment in 1998 as part of the Norwegian Refugee Council, we have 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. 

IDMC’s thematic research series ‘The Ripple Effect: Economic Impacts of Internal Displacement’ seeks to measure the effects of internal displacement on the economic potential of IDPs, host communities and societies.  

Download this latest report ‘Unveiling the Cost of Internal Displacement’. 

For more information or interviews, please contact:

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