Economies: rights and access to work (Forced Migration Review 58)
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When people are forced to leave their homes, they usually also leave behind their means of economic activity. In their new location, they may not be able, or permitted, to work. This has wide-ranging implications. This issue includes 22 articles on the main feature theme of Economies: rights and access to work. It also includes two ‘mini-features’, one on Refugee-led social protection and one on Humans and animals in refugee camps. See more at: www.fmreview.org/economies.
Health challenges in the Sahrawi refugee camps in the Algerian desert are faced by both human and animal populations, and therefore responses must fun...
In our main feature, authors explore the complex interactions of the constraints and opportunities involved, drawing on case-studies from around the w...
Organisations supporting recently resettled refugees to find employment should focus on providing them with the tools to navigate the employment marke...
The granting to Syrian refugees in Turkey of the right to access formal work was a first step towards their economic integration but a number of chall...
The launch of Red Cross Denmark’s Fast Track programme, which focuses on early refugee employment, offers an opportunity to explore the relationship b...
Multi-sited fieldwork in Uganda allows for an exploration of the complex patterns of engagement between refugees’ economic activities and local econom...
In Rwanda, Congolese refugees have the same freedom of movement and right to work as Rwandans but the experiences and economic activities of these two...