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The IGP and InterSCT win funding to explore prosperity and protracted encampment in Lebanon

14 August 2019

Green Space Bar Elias
(c) CatalyticAction - rehabilitated green space

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Dr. Christopher Harker, Director of Research at the Institute for Global Prosperity, UCL, working in collaboration withÌýJames Shraiky, Director of the Interprofessional Studio for Complexity ThinkingÌý(InterSCT),Ìýhave recently won a UCL Global Engagement Fund award to explore how residents of Shatila Refugee Camp, Lebanon, create pathways to prosperity under conditions of long-term encampment.ÌýGlobal Engagement Funds support UCL academics in collaborating with colleagues across the world to increase their global impact and puts partnerships of equivalence at the heart of everything UCL does.

The funds will be used to organise three workshops in autumn 2019, in which camp residents will discuss their everyday lives and how they strive for a contextually defined 'good life'. The research team will then translate residents’ accounts into an operations toolkit. This will include examples ofÌýresidents-ledÌýbest practice that will guide the management and operations of existing and future camps.ÌýThe operations toolkit will be sharedÌýwith members of the political and humanitarian communities atÌýtwoÌýpractitionerÌýworkshopsÌýin Lebanon and LondonÌýin spring 2020, and at the 69th United Nations Civil Society Conference.Ìý

This project builds on Dr. Harker's current research, which examines how people in Palestine, Lebanon and the UK are creating more secure livelihoods in adverse political, economic and social conditions.ÌýInterSCT Director James Shraiky, whose work focuses on developing creative, systematic, evidence-based, and multidimensional solutions to complex problems worldwide, has significant experience researching thriving in protracted refugee camps.ÌýInterSCT have previously implemented a refugee-centred approach to solving problems of protracted encampment in several Congolese refugee camps in Rwanda and Syrian refugee camps in Turkey.

There are currently 12 officially recognised Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon, in which tens of thousands of Palestinians face overcrowding, poor living conditions and demographic pressure from population growth and influxes of newly arriving marginalized populations. The Shatila Camp, one of the largest, has experienced significant social and economic transformations during the last decade as the camp has begun to host a large number of Syrian refugees and migrant workers from Northern Africa. Lebanon has no national refugee law, and although many refugees have been hosted, they are forbidden from working and treated as guests with no possibility for naturalization. Camp residents have taken matters into their own hands, rebelled against archaic policies and started pursuing their aspirations. For example, they haveÌýcreatedÌýindependent businesses, employed other refugees, and created viable economic livelihoods. The funded project seeks to record and understand practices such as these through which camp residents secure their futures.Ìý

The project findings will be published on the UCL Public Policy Blog in early 2020, followed by aÌýcontribution toÌýtheÌýAmerican University in Beirut'sÌýRefugees Research CenterÌýPolicy BriefÌýSeries.ÌýTheÌýresearch team intend to publish their complete findings inÌýthe Journal of Humanitarian Affairs.

To learn more about the project, please contact Dr Christopher Harker (christopher.harker@ucl.ac.uk)

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