Refugee camp

A refugee camp is a temporary settlement built to receive refugees and people in refugee-like situations. Refugee camps usually accommodate displaced persons who have fled their home country, but camps are also made for internally displaced people. Usually, refugees seek asylum after they have escaped war in their home countries, but some camps also house environmental and economic migrants. Camps with over a hundred thousand people are common, but as of 2012, the average-sized camp housed around 11,400.[1] They are usually built and run by a government, the United Nations, international organizations (such as the International Committee of the Red Cross), or non-governmental organization. Unofficial refugee camps, such as Idomeni in Greece or the Calais jungle in France, are where refugees are largely left without support of governments or international organizations.[2]

Refugee camp (located in present-day eastern Congo-Kinshasa) for Rwandans following the Rwandan genocide of 1994.
A camp in Guinea for refugees from Sierra Leone.
Nahr el-Bared, Palestinian refugee camp in North Lebanon in 2005.
Mitzpe Ramon, development camp for Jewish refugees, southern Israel, 1957

Refugee camps generally develop in an impromptu fashion with the aim of meeting basic human needs for only a short time. Facilities that make a camp look or feel more permanent are often prohibited by host country governments. If the return of refugees is prevented (often by civil war), a humanitarian crisis can result or continue.

According to UNHCR, most refugees worldwide do not live in refugee camps. At the end of 2015, some 67% of refugees around the world lived in individual, private accommodations.[3] This can be partly explained by the high number of Syrian refugees renting apartments in urban agglomerations across the Middle East. Worldwide, slightly over a quarter (25.4%) of refugees were reported to be living in managed camps. At the end of 2015, about 56% of the total refugee population in rural locations resided in a managed camp, compared to the 2% who resided in individual accommodation. In urban locations, the overwhelming majority (99%) of refugees lived in individual accommodations, compared with less than 1% who lived in a managed camp. A small percentage of refugees also live in collective centers, transit camps, and self-settled camps.[4]

Despite 74% of refugees being in urban areas, the service delivery model of international humanitarian aid agencies remains focused on the establishment and operation of refugee camps.[5]

Facilities

The average camp size is recommended by UNHCR to be 45 square metres (480 sq ft) per person of accessible camp area.[6] Within this area, the following facilities can usually be found:[7]

  • An administrative headquarters to coordinate services may be inside or outside the actual camp.
  • Sleeping accommodations are frequently tents, prefabricated huts, or dwellings constructed of locally available materials. UNHCR recommends a minimum of 3.5 m2 of covered living area per person. Shelters should be at least 2 m apart.
  • Gardens attached to the family plot: UNHCR recommends a plot size of 15 m2 per person.
  • Hygiene facilities, such as washing areas, latrines, or toilets: UNHCR recommends one shower per 50 persons and one communal latrine per 20 persons. Distance for the latter should be no more than 50 m from shelter and not closer than 6 m. Hygiene facilities should be separated by gender.
  • Places for water collection: Either water tanks where water is off-loaded from trucks (then filtered and potentially treated with disinfectant chemicals such as chlorine), or water tap stands that are connected to boreholes are needed. UNHCR recommends 20 l of water per person and one tap stand per 80 persons that should be no farther than 200 m away from households.
  • Clinics, hospitals and immunization centres: UNHCR recommends one health centre per 20,000 persons and one referral hospital per 200,000 persons.
  • Food distribution and therapeutic feeding centres: UNHCR recommends one food distribution centre per 5,000 persons and one feeding centre per 20,000 persons.
  • Communication equipment (e.g. radio): Some long-standing camps have their own radio stations.
  • Security, including protection from banditry (e.g. barriers and security checkpoints) and peacekeeping troops to prevent armed violence: Police stations may be outside the actual camp.
  • Schools and training centers: UNHCR recommends one school per 5,000 persons.
Market stalls at Nong Samet Refugee Camp in 1984: The market was established and run by the refugees and sold goods from Thailand, as well as food, supplies, and medicines distributed by aid agencies.
  • Markets and shops: UNHCR recommends one marketplace per 20,000 persons.[6]

Schools and markets may be prohibited by the host country government to discourage refugees from settling permanently in camps. Many refugee camps also have:

  • Cemeteries or crematoria
  • Locations for solid waste disposal: One 100-l rubbish container should be provided per 50 persons and one refuse pit per 500 persons.
  • Reception or transit centre where refugees initially arrive and register before they are allowed into the camp: Reception centres may be outside the camps and closer to the border of the country where refugees enter.
  • Churches or other religious centers or places of worship[8]

To understand and monitor an emergency over a period of time, the development and organisation of the camps can be tracked by satellite,[9] and analyzed by GIS.[10][11]

Arrival

Most new arrivals travel distances up to 500 km by foot. The journey can be dangerous, e.g. wild animals, armed bandits or militias, or landmines. Some refugees are supported by the International Organization for Migration, and some use smugglers. Many new arrivals suffer from acute malnutrition and dehydration. Long queues can develop outside the reception centres, and waiting times up to two months are possible. People outside the camp are not entitled to official support (but refugees from inside may support them). Some locals sell water or food for excessive prices and make large profits. Not uncommonly, some refugees die while waiting outside the reception centre. They stay in the reception centre until their refugee status is approved and the degree of vulnerability assessed. This usually takes two weeks. They are then taken, usually by bus, to the camp. New arrivals are registered, fingerprinted, and interviewed by the host country government and the UNHCR. Health and nutrition screenings follow. Those who are extremely malnourished are taken to therapeutic feeding centres and the sick to a hospital. Men and women receive counselling separate from each other to determine their needs. After registration, they are given food rations (until then only high energy biscuits), receive ration cards (the primary marker of refugee status), soap, jerrycans, kitchen sets, sleeping mats, plastic tarpaulins to build shelters (some receive tents or fabricated shelters). Leaders from the refugee community may provide further support to the new arrivals.

Housing and sanitation

Residential plots are allocated (e.g. 10 x 12 m for a family of four to seven people). Shelters may sometimes be built by refugees themselves with locally available materials, but aid agencies may supply materials or even prefabricated housing.[12] Shelters are frequently very close to each other, and frequently, many families share a single dwelling, rendering privacy for couples nonexistent. Camps may have communal unisex pit latrines shared by many households, but aid agencies may provide improved sanitation facilities.[13] Household pit latrines may be built by families themselves. Latrines may not always be kept sufficiently clean and disease-free. In some areas, space for new pits is limited. Each refugee is supposed to receive around 20 l of water a day, but many have to survive on much less than that (some may get as little as 8 l per day).[14] A high number of persons may use a tap stand (against a standard number of one per 80 persons). Drainage of water from bathroom and kitchen use may be poor and garbage may be disposed in a haphazard fashion. Few or no sanitary facilities may be accessible for people with disabilities. Poor sanitation may lead to outbreaks of infectious disease, and rainy-season flooding of latrine pits increases the risk of infection.[15]

Food rations

The World Food Programme (WFP) provides food rations twice a month: 2,100 calories/person/day. Ideally it should be:

  • 9 oz (255 g) whole grain (maize or sorghum)
  • 7 oz (200 g) milled grain (wheat flour)
  • 1.5 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 3 tablespoons pulses (beans or lentils)

Diet is insensitive to cultural differences and household needs. WFP is frequently unable to provide all of these staples, thus calories are distributed through whatever commodity is available, e.g. only maize flour. Up to 90% of the refugees sell part or most of their food ration to get cash. Loss of the ration card means no entitlement to food. In 2015, the WFP introduced electronic vouchers.

Economy, work, and income

Research found that if enough aid is provided, the refugees' stimulus effects can boost the host countries' economies.[16] The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has a policy of helping refugees work and be productive, using their existing skills to meet their own needs and needs of the host country, to:

Ensure the right of refugees to access work and other livelihood opportunities as they are available for nationals... Match programme interventions with corresponding levels of livelihood capacity (existing livelihood assets such as skills and past work experience) and needs identified in the refugee population, and the demands of the market... Assist refugees in becoming self-reliant. Cash / food / rental assistance delivered through humanitarian agencies should be short-term and conditional and gradually lead to self-reliance activities as part of longer-term development... Convene internal and external stakeholders around the results of livelihood assessments to jointly identify livelihood support opportunities.[17]

Refugee hosting countries, though, do not usually follow this policy and instead do not allow refugees to work legally. In many countries, the only option is either to work for a small incentive (with NGOs based in the camp) or to work illegally with no rights and often bad conditions. In some camps, refugees set up their own businesses. Some refugees even became rich with that. Those without a job or without relatives and friends who send remittances, need to sell parts of their food rations to get cash. As support does not usually provide cash, effective demand may not be created[18]

Refugee tents at Arbat Transit Camp for Syrian Refugees in Sulaymaniyah, Iraqi Kurdistan, March 2014.

The main markets of bigger camps usually offer electronics, groceries, hardware, medicine, food, clothing, cosmetics, and services such as prepared food (restaurants, coffee–tea shops), laundry, internet and computer access, banking, electronic repairs and maintenance, and education. Some traders specialize in buying food rations from refugees in small quantities and selling them in large quantities to merchants outside the camp. Many refugees buy in small quantities because they do not have enough money to buy normal sizes, i.e. the goods are put in smaller packages and sold for a higher price.

Payment mechanisms used in refugee camps include:

  • Cash aid/vouchers
  • In-kind payments (such as voluntary work)
  • Community-based saving/lending [19]

Investment by outside private sector organizations in community-based energy solutions such as diesel generators, solar kiosks and biogas digesters has been identified as a way to promote community economic development and employment.[20]

Camp structure

According to UNHCR vocabulary a refugee camp consists of: settlements, sectors, blocks, communities, and families. 16 families make up a community, 16 communities make up a block, four blocks make up a sector, and four sectors are called a settlement. A large camp may consist of several settlements.[6] Each block elects a community leader to represent the block. Settlements and markets in bigger camps are often arranged according to nationalities, ethnicities, tribes, and clans of their inhabitants, such as at Dadaab and Kakuma.

Democracy and justice

In those camps where elections are held, elected refugee community leaders are the contact point within the community for both community members and aid agencies. They mediate and negotiate to resolve problems and liaise with refugees, UNHCR, and other aid agencies. Refugees are expected to convey their concerns, messages, or reports of crimes, etc. through their community leaders. Therefore, community leaders are considered to be part of the disciplinary machinery and many refugees mistrust them. There are allegations of aid agencies bribing them. Community leaders can decide what a crime is and thus, whether it is reported to police or other agencies. They can use their position to marginalize some refugees from minority groups. In Kakuma and Dadaab Refugee Camps in Kenya, Somali refugees have been allowed to establish their own 'court' system which is funded by charities. Elected community leaders and the elders of the communities provide an informal kind of jurisdiction in refugee camps. They preside over these courts and are allowed to pocket the fines they impose. Refugees are left without legal remedies against abuses and cannot appeal against their own 'courts'.[21]

Security

Security in a refugee camp is usually the responsibility of the host country and is provided by the military or local police. The UNHCR only provides refugees with legal protection, not physical protection. However, local police or the legal system of the host countries may not take responsibility for crimes that occur within camps. In many camps refugees create their own patrolling systems as police protection is insufficient. Most camps are enclosed with barbed wire fences. This is not only for the protection of the refugees, but also to prevent refugees from moving freely or interacting with local people.

Refugee camps may sometimes serve as headquarters for the recruitment, support and training of guerrilla organizations engaged in fighting in the refugees' area of origin; such organizations often use humanitarian aid to supply their troops.[22] Cambodian refugee camps in Thailand and Rwandan refugee camps in Zaire supported armed groups until their destruction by military forces.[23][24]

Refugee camps are also places where terror attacks, bombings, militia attacks, stabbings and shootings take place and abductions of aid workers are not unheard of. The police can also play a role in attacks on refugees.

Health and health care

Due to crowding and lack of infrastructure, refugee camps are often unhygienic, leading to a high incidence of infectious diseases and epidemics. Sick or injured refugees rely on free health care provided by aid agencies in camps, and may not have access to health services outside of a camp setting.[25] Some aid agencies employ outreach workers who make visits from tent to tent to offer medical assistance to ill and malnourished refugees, but resources are often scarce.[26] Vulnerable persons who have difficulties accessing services may be supported through individual case management. Common infectious diseases include diarrhea from various causes, malaria, viral hepatitis, measles, meningitis, respiratory infections such as influenza,[7] and urinary/reproductive tract infections.[27] These are exacerbated by malnutrition.[7] In some camps, guards exchange food and money for sex with young girls and women, in what is called "survival sex".[28]

Reproductive Health

The UNHCR is responsible for providing reproductive health services to refugee populations and in camps.[29] This includes educating refugees on reproductive health, family planning, giving them access to healthcare professionals for their reproductive needs and providing necessary supplies such as feminine hygiene products.[29]

Mental Health

Refugees experience a wide range of traumas in their home country and during their journey to other countries. However, the mental health problems resulting from violent conflicts, such as PTSD and disaster-induced depression, can be compounded by problems induced by the conditions of refugee camps.[30] Mental health concerns within humanitarian aid programs include stress about one's home country, isolation from support structures, and loss of personal identity and agency.[31]

These consequences are increased by the daily stresses of displacement and life within camps, including ongoing risks of violence, lack of basic services, and uncertainty about the future. Women and girls in camps often fear being alone, especially at night, because of the risk of trafficking and sexual violence.[32] The most prevalent clinical problems among Syrian refugees are depression, prolonged grief disorder, PTSD, and anxiety disorders. However, the perception of mental health is affected by cultural and religious values that result in different modes of expressing distress or making sense of psychological symptoms. In addition, refugees who have experienced torture often endure somatic symptoms in which emotional distress from torture is expressed in physical forms.[31]

Unique conditions for the mental health of refugees within camps has led to the development of alternative psychological interventions and approaches. Some mental health services address the effects of negative discourses about migrants and the way that traumatic experiences affect and fragment identity. A therapeutic support project in the Calais refugee camp focused on building spaces of collectivity and community, such as youth groups, to challenge the individualization of distress and trauma. This project encouraged discussion of refugees' small acts of resistance to difficult situations and promoted activities from migrants' cultural roots to develop a positive conception of identity.[33] Other mental health approaches acknowledge core cultural tenets and work to structure the camp itself around these values. For example, in Afghan refugee camps in Pakistan, Pakistani policy prioritized the centrality of personal dignity and collective honor in the cultural traditions of Afghan migrants, and constructed "refugee tented villages" that grouped people within their own ethnolinguistic, tribal, or regional communities.[34]

Freedom of movement

Once admitted to a camp, refugees usually do not have freedom to move about the country but are required to obtain Movement Passes from the UNHCR and the host country government. Yet informally many refugees are mobile and travel between cities and the camps, or otherwise make use of networks or technology in maintaining these links. Due to widespread corruption in public service there is a grey area that creates space for refugees to manoeuvre. Many refugees in the camps, given the opportunity, try to make their way to cities. Some refugee elites even rotate between the camp and the city, or rotate periods in the camp with periods elsewhere in the country in family networks, sometimes with another relative in a Western country that contributes financially. Refugee camps may serve as a safety net for people who go to cities or who attempt to return to their countries of origin. Some refugees marry nationals so that they can bypass the police rules regarding movements out of the camps. It is a lucrative side-business for many police officers working the area around the camps to have many unofficial roadblocks and to target refugees travelling outside the camps who must pay bribes to avoid deportation.

Duration and durable solutions

Although camps are intended to be a temporary solution, some of them exist for decades. Some Palestinian refugee camps have existed since 1948, camps for Eritreans in Sudan (such as the Shagarab camp) have existed since 1968,[35] the Sahrawi refugee camps in Algeria have existed since 1975, camps for Burmese in Thailand (such as the Mae La refugee camp) have existed since 1986, Buduburam in Ghana since 1990, or Dadaab and Kakuma in Kenya since 1991 and 1992, respectively. In fact, over half of refugees as of the end of 2017 are in "protracted refugee situations", defined as situations where at least 25,000 people from a particular country are refugees in another particular country for 5 or more years (though this might not be representative of refugees who are specifically in camps).[36] The longer a camp exist the lower tends to be the annual international funding and the bigger the implications for human rights.[37] Some camps grow into permanent settlements and even merge with nearby older communities, such as Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon and Deir al-Balah, Palestine.

People may stay in these camps, receiving emergency food and medical aid, for many years and possibly even for their whole life. To prevent this the UNHCR promotes three alternatives to that:

Notable refugee camps

Darfur refugee camp in Chad

The largest refugee settlements in the world are in the eastern Sahel region of Africa. For many years the Dadaab complex was the largest, until it was surpassed by Bidi Bidi in 2017.[42][43]

Africa

  • There are 12 camps in the east of Chad hosting approximately 250,000 Sudanese refugees from the Darfur region in Sudan. These camps are in Breidjing, Oure Cassoni, Mile, Treguine, Iridimi, Touloum, Kounoungou, Goz Amer, Farchana, Am Nabak, Gaga and Djabal.[44] Some of these camps appear in the documentary Google Darfur.
  • A number of camps in the south of Chad – such as Dosseye, Kobitey, Mbitoye, Danamadja, Sido, Doyaba and Djako – are hosting approximately 113,000 refugees from Central African Republic.[45]
  • There are a rapidly growing number of camps in Uganda, such as Nakivale, Kayaka II, Kyangwali and Rwamwanja. They host 170,000 refugees from South Sudan and the Democratic Republic Of Congo.[46]
  • By 2013 there were four camps in Maban County, South Sudan, hosting refugees and internally displaced people. Yusuf Batil camp was home to 37,000 refugees, Doro camp to 44,000, Jamam camp to 20,000 and Gendrassa camp 10,000.[47] These population numbers are subject to fluctuation during the ongoing violence in the country.
  • Buduburam refugee camp in Ghana, home to more than 12,000 Liberians[48] (opened 1990)
  • Dadaab refugee camps (Ifo, Ifo II, Dagahaley, Hagadera, and Kambioos) in North Eastern Kenya, established in 1991 and now hosting more than 330,000 refugees from Somalia.[49]
  • Sahrawi refugee camps near Tindouf, South Western Algeria, were opened circa 1976 and are called Laayoune, Smara, Awserd, February 27, Rabouni, Daira of Bojador and Dakhla.
  • Ras Ajdir camp, close to the Tunisian border in Libya, was opened in 2011 and is housing between 20,000 and 30,000 Libyan refugees.[50]
  • Dzaleka camp in the Dowa District of Malawi is home to 34,000 refugees from Burundi, the DRC and Rwanda.[51]
  • Nyarugusu refugee camp in Tanzania opened in 1997 and initially hosted 60.000 refugees from the DRC. Due to the recent conflicts in Burundi it also hosts 90.000 refugees from Burundi. In 2014 it was the 9th largest refugee camp.[52] However, since the conflict in Burundi it is considered one of the world's biggest and most overcrowded camps.[53]
  • Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya was opened in 1991. In 2014, it was the third largest refugee camp worldwide.[54][52] As of June 2015, Kakuma hosts 185,000 people, mostly migrants from the civil war in South Sudan.[55]
  • Bwagiriza and Gatumba refugee camps in Burundi host refugees from the DRC.
  • There are a number of camps close to Dolo Odo in southern Ethiopia, hosting refugees from Somalia.[56] In 2014 the Dolo Odo camps (Melkadida, Bokolmanyo, Buramino, Kobe Camp, Fugnido, Hilaweyn and Adiharush) were considered to be the second largest.[54][52]
  • Jomvu, Hatimy and Swaleh Nguru camps near Mombasa, Kenya, were closed in 1997. Refugees, mainly displaced people from Somalia, were either forced to relocate to Kakuma, repatriated or remunerated to voluntarily relocate into unsafe areas in Somalia.[57] Other closed camps in the area include Liboi, Oda, Walda, Thika, Utange and Marafa.
  • Hart Sheik in Ethiopia hosted more than 250,000 mostly refugees from Somalia between 1988 and 2004.
  • Itang camp in Ethiopia hosted 182,000 refugees from South Sudan and was the world's largest refugee camp for some time during the 1990s.[58]
  • Benaco and Ngara in Tanzania.
  • Kala, Meheba and Mwange camps in the northwest of Zambia host refugees from Angola and DRC.[59]
  • There are 12 camps, such as Shagarab and Wad Sharifey, in eastern Sudan. They host around 66,000 mostly Eritrean refugees, the first of whom arrived in 1968.[35]
  • Ali Addeh (or Ali Adde) and Holhol camps in Djibouti host 23,000 refugees, who are mainly from Somalia, but also Ethiopians and Eritreans.[60]
  • Osire camp in central Namibia was established in 1992 to accommodate refugees from Angola, Burundi, the DRC, Rwanda and Somalia. It had 20,000 inhabitants in 1998 and only 3,000 in 2014.
  • Lainé and Kouankan (I & II) camps in Guinea hosted nearly 29,300 refugees mostly from Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Côte d'Ivoire. The number reduced to 15,000 in 2009.[61]
  • Cameroon hosted more than 240,000 UNHCR registered refugees in 2014, mainly from the Central African Republic: Minawao refugee camp in the north and Gado Badzere, Borgop, Ngam, Timangolo, Mbilé and Lolo refugee camps in the east of Cameroon.[62]
  • There are a number of camps in Rwanda that host 85,000 refugees from the DRC: Gihembe, Kigeme, Kiziba, Mugombwa and Nyabiheke camps.[63]
  • Mentao camp in Burkina Faso hosts 13,000 Malian refugees.[64]
  • PTP camp near Zwedru, Bahn camp and Little Wlebo camp in eastern Liberia is home to 12,000 refugees from Ivory Coast.[65]
  • M'Bera camp in southeastern Mauritania hosts 50,000 Malian refugees.[66]
  • Choucha camp in Tunisia hosted nearly 20,000 refugees from 13 different countries who fled from Libya in 2011. Half of them are sub-Saharan African and Arab refugees and the other half are Bangladeshis who had been working in Libya. 3,000 refugees remained the camp in 2012, 1,300 in 2013 and its closure is planned.[67]
  • Comè in Benin hosted Togolese refugees until it was closed in 2006.
  • Lazaret in Niger was the largest camp in the Sahel during the extreme drought of 1973–1975 and mainly hosted Tuareg people.
  • Tongogara Refugee Camp in Zimbabwe was established for Mozambican refugees in 1984 and housed in 58,000 of them in 1994.[68]

Asia

Middle East

Europe

  • Cyprus internment camps (1946–1949) to accommodate Jewish refugees and Holocaust survivors
  • Moria, Oreokastro, Kastikas, Idomeni, and other camps on the Greek islands of Lesbos, Samos, and Chios have rapidly filled (up to 3-4 times more than their official capacity) with migrants fleeing violence in the Middle East and Africa. Since 2015, refugees fleeing conflict such as the Syrian Civil War have attempted to enter Europe but are often stopped in Greece, where they spend, on average, 8 months to a year in camps.[82] Some camps have been destroyed or evacuated, including the evacuation of 4,000 residents from a camp on the island of Lesbos (capacity 1,500) from a tent fire that destroyed more than half the camp.[83]
  • Lampedusa immigrant reception center for refugees, asylum seekers and other immigrants on the Italian island of Lampedusa.
  • Ħal Far, Malta for African immigrants.
Nong Samet Refugee Camp on the Thai-Cambodian border, May 1984
  • There are two Emergency Transit Centres for refugees in Europe. One in Timișoara, Romania,[84] and one in Humenné, Slovakia.[85] They can provide a temporary safe haven for refugees who needed to be evacuated immediately from life-threatening situations before being resettled.[86]
  • Sangatte camp[87] and the Calais jungle in northern France.[88]
  • La Linière and Basroch camps in Grande-Synthe, on the outskirts of Dunkirk, northern France[89][90][91] (destroyed by fire on April 11, 2017).[92]
  • The Oksbøl Refugee Camp was the largest camp for German Refugees in Denmark after World War II.
  • Traiskirchen camp in eastern Austria hosts refugees that come to Europe as part of the European migrant crisis.
  • Friedland refugee camp in Germany hosted refugees who fled from the former eastern territories of Germany at the end of World War II, between 1944 and 1950. Between 1950 and 1987 it was a transit centre for East German (GDR) citizens who wanted to flee to West Germany (FRG).
  • International Refugee Organization camp at Lesum, near Bremen, Germany.
  • Kjesäter in Sweden was a refugee camp and transit centre for Norwegian refugees fleeing Nazi persecution during World War II.
  • Kløvermarken in Denmark was a refugee camp that hosted 19,000 German refugees between 1945 and 1949.
  • Vrela Ribnička refugee camp in Montenegro was built in 1994 and houses refugees of Bosnian origin who were displaced during the Yugoslav Wars.
  • Čardak was a camp in Serbia, for Serbs who fled from Croatia and Bosnia.
  • Bagnoli camp in Naples, Italy, housed up to 10,000 refugees from Eastern Europe between 1946 and 1951.

Refugee camps by country and population

Populations of concern to UNHCR in refugee camps between 2006 and 2014
Country Camp 2006 [93] 2007 [94] 2008 [95] 2009 [96] 2010 [97] 2011 [98] 2012 [99] 2013 [100] 2014 [101]
ChadAm Nabak16,50416,70116,69617,40218,08720,39523,61124,513 25,553
ChadAmboko12,06212,00212,05711,67111,11111,62711,29710,719 11,819
KenyaDagahaley, Dadaab39,52639,62665,58193,17993,470122,214121,127104,565 88,486
ChadDjabal15,16215,60217,15315,69317,20018,08318,89019,635 20,809
YemenAl Kharaz9,2989,49111,39416,46614,10016,90419,04716,816 16,500
ChadBreidjing28,93230,07732,66932,55934,46535,93837,49439,797 41,146
MalawiDzaleka4,9508,6909,42510,27512,81916,85316,66416,935 5,874
ChadFarchana18,94719,81521,18320,91521,98323,32324,41926,292 27,548
KenyaHagadera, Dadaab59,18570,41290,40383,518101,506137,528139,483114,729 106,968
SudanGirba8,9969,0815,1205,6455,5925,5706,2526,295 6,306
ChadGondje12,62412,66412,70011,1849,58610,00611,71711,349 12,138
KenyaIfo, Dadaab54,15761,83279,46979,42497,610118,97298,29499,761 83,750
ChadIridimi17,38018,26919,53118,15418,85921,32921,08321,976 22,908
KenyaKakuma90,45762,49753,06864,79169,82285,862107,205128,540 153,959
SudanKilo 2611,42312,6907,1337,6107,6087,6348,3108,303 8,391
ChadKounoungou13,31513,50018,51416,23716,92718,25119,14320,876 21,960
BangladeshKutapalong10,14410,70811,04711,25111,46911,70612,40412,626 13,176
ThailandMae La46,14838,13032,86230,07329,18827,62926,69025,156 46,978
ThailandMae La Oon14,36613,45013,47813,81111,99110,2049,6118,675 12,245
ThailandMae Ra Ma Luang12,84011,57811,30413,57111,74910,2699,4148,421 13,825
ChadMile15,55716,20217,47614,22117,38218,85319,82320,818 21,723
BangladeshNayapara16,01016,67917,07617,09117,54717,72918,06618,288 19,179
ThailandNu Po13,13113,37711,1139,8009,26215,98215,7157,927 13,372
TanzaniaNyarugusu52,71350,84149,62862,18462,72663,55168,13268,888 57,267
ChadOure Cassoni26,78628,03528,43031,18932,20636,16833,26735,415 36,466
EthiopiaShimelba13,04316,05710,64810,1359,1878,2956,0335,885 6,106
IndiaTamil Nadu69,60972,93473,28672,88369,99868,15267,16565,674 65,057
ChadTouloum22,35823,13124,93526,53224,50027,58827,94028,501 29,683
ChadTreguine14,92115,71817,26017,00017,82019,09919,95720,990 21,801
SudanUm Gargur9,84510,1048,1808,7158,6418,5508,94710,172 10,269
ThailandUm Pium19,46419,39714,05112,49411,74211,01710,5819,816 16,109
SudanWad Sherife33,37136,42913,63615,62615,81915,48115,47215,318 15,357
EthiopiaFugnido27,17518,72620,20221,77022,69234,24742,044 53,218
ChadGaga12,40217,70820,67719,04319,88821,47422,26623,236 24,591
PakistanGamkol37,46233,49933,03335,16932,83031,70131,326 30,241
PakistanGandaf13,60912,65912,49712,73113,34612,63212,508 12,068
South SudanGendressa14,75817,289 17,975
RwandaGihembe17,73218,08119,02719,40719,85319,82714,006 14,735
LiberiaBahn5,0218,8518,412 5,257
EthiopiaBambasi12,19913,354 14,279
PakistanBarakai30,26628,85128,59732,07728,09326,73925,909 24,786
EthiopiaTongo9,6059,51810,399 11,075
ChadYaroungou15,26013,35216,57311,92510,54410,91611,594
South SudanYusuf Batil36,75439,033 40,240
JordanZaatari145,209 84,773
PakistanThall17,26615,60215,26915,41913,46812,97612,847 12,247
ThailandTham Hin7,7676,0075,0784,2827,1507,242 7,406
NepalTimai10,41310,4219,9358,5537,058
PakistanTimer13,91912,08011,83911,76411,1618,6658,603 8,690
AlgeriaTindouf90,00090,00090,00090,00090,00090,00090,00090,000 90,000
PakistanOld Akora41,64737,75737,01942,87237,73636,69336,384 34,789
PakistanOld Shamshatoo66,55658,77358,80461,20554,50253,57352,835 48,268
NamibiaOsire6,4867,7308,1228,506
UgandaPader196,00090,00038,5506,677
PakistanPadhana10,56410,40310,38011,39310,0759,8929,775 9,362
PakistanPanian65,03362,29361,82267,33258,81956,82056,295 53,816
PakistanPir Alizai16,56314,71013,80215,15710,2439,7719,204 7,681
NepalSanischare21,28521,38620,12816,74513,64910,1739,2126,599
PakistanSaranan24,62524,27224,11926,78621,92721,21820,744 18,248
SudanShagarab21,99922,70614,99016,56224,10427,80937,42834,147 34,039
EthiopiaSheder6,5677,96410,45811,32611,88211,248 12,263
EthiopiaSherkole13,9588,9898,9627,5279,737 10,171
PakistanSurkhab12,22511,87711,78912,3047,4227,2147,012 5,764
Burkina FasoMentao6,90511,907 10,953
TanzaniaMtabila90,68045,24736,00936,78937,554
PakistanMunda13,27411,38611,22512,72810,34110,1009,941 9,388
BurundiMusasa6,7645,9846,5726,1536,3306,5006,829 7,001
ZambiaMwange21,17917,91114,4295,820
UgandaNakivale25,69233,17642,11352,24964,373 66,691
PakistanNew Durrani10,45814,39712,43814,978
PakistanOblan11,5649,6249,56010,0659,4749,3319,294 9,015
LiberiaPTP9,35312,734 15,300
UgandaRhino Camp18,49314,3285,5824,266 18,762
UgandaRwamwanja29,797 52,489
LiberiaLittle Wlebbo8,39910,009 8,481
TanzaniaLugufu75,25445,30828,995
TanzaniaLukole39,68525,490
ThailandMai Nai Soi19,10319,31112,25212,24411,7309,725 12,414
EthiopiaMai Ayni15,76212,25514,43215,71518,207 17,808
IraqMakhmour11,90010,72810,91211,10110,24010,55210,534
MozambiqueMaratane5,0196,6469,5767,3987,707
UgandaMasindi55,00055,00020,0006,500
ZambiaMayukwayukwa10,63610,66010,47410,18410,11711,366
MauritaniaM'bera66,392 48,910
ZambiaMeheba13,73213,89215,76314,97017,70817,806 8,410
EthiopiaMelkadida25,49140,69642,36543,480 44,645
ChadAbgadam21,914 21,571
EthiopiaAdi Harush6,92315,98223,56225,801 34,090
UgandaAdjumani54,05152,78421,71428,0007,3659,27911,986 96,926
South SudanAjuong Thok6,691 15,015
DjiboutiAli Adde6,7396,3768,92414,33319,50017,35417,523 18,208
UgandaAmuru234,00098,00035,4756,779
EthiopiaAwbarre / Teferiber8,58111,04512,29313,12013,42613,33113,752 12,965
PakistanAzakhel25,64924,25823,96326,34221,39821,23121,132 20,191
JordanAzraq 11,315
PakistanBadaber36,61430,32730,10731,34528,72926,22725,589 23,918
NepalBeldangi 1 & 252,99752,96750,35042,12236,76133,85531,97624,377 18,379
ChadBelome23,949 26,521
EthiopiaBokolmanyo21,70714,98838,50140,42341,670 41,665
GhanaBuduburam36,15926,17914,99211,334
EthiopiaBuramino35,20740,114 39,471
BurundiBwagiriza2,8964,5266,15910,1059,289 9,480
NigerAbala11,12612,216 12,938
PakistanChakdara17,42016,42716,06918,75213,35411,24211,184 10,704
KenyaIfo 2, Dadaab64,94569,26965,693 52,310
KenyaKambioos, Dadaab10,83318,12620,435 21,035
ChadDogdore19,50019,50019,500
South SudanDoro28,70947,422 50,087
ChadDosseye2,2776,1588,5569,6079,4339,7249,92215,766 21,522
PakistanGirdi Jungle29,78329,71729,71631,64222,74022,34022,065 17,376
NepalGoldhap9,6029,6948,3156,3564,764
Burkina FasoGoudebo4,9439,287 9,403
ChadGoz Amer19,26120,09721,64021,44924,60825,84127,09130,105 31,477
ChadGoz Beïda73,00073,00060,500
UgandaGulu156,00044,0009,043
YemenAl-Mazrak12,07512,30812,416
EthiopiaHilaweyn25,74730,96037,305 38,890
EthiopiaHitsats10,226 33,235
UgandaImpevi23,33122,0617,453
NigerIntikane11,221 12,738
Sri LankaJaffna10,5229,1086,436
PakistanJalala16,16014,11513,85416,09414,04213,42113,278 12,968
EthiopiaKobe26,03331,65636,488 39,214
PakistanKoga10,76610,4589,2649,1839,2168,8938,738 8,404
PakistanKot Chandna15,13015,03715,01217,78715,10014,88914,664 13,796
EthiopiaKule 46,314
PakistanJalozai83,61632,15530,955100,74832,49957,77122,076
PakistanKababian14,72911,29112,33513,21412,50412,16711,664 11,044
PakistanKacha Gari26,72124,55428,365
ZambiaKala19,14316,87712,768
South SudanKaya18,788 21,918
UgandaKyaka II16,41018,22914,75017,44218,055 22,616
EthiopiaKebribeyah16,39916,87916,13216,49616,60116,40816,00915,788
IranRafsanjan12,7156,6306,852
PakistanKhaki16,26716,01015,93316,22115,76814,93914,698 14,101
NepalKhudunabari13,50613,22613,25412,05411,0679,032
BurundiKinama8,4479,3699,4809,759 9,796
UgandaKitgum164,000122,00012,2907,070
RwandaKiziba17,97818,13018,32318,69318,88818,91915,927
PakistanKhairābād-Kund14,67411,68611,66911,83912,92112,961
UgandaKyangwali19,13220,10913,43420,60621,280 40,023
GuineaLaine11,4065,1854,187
EthiopiaLeitchour 47,711
BotswanaDukwe 2,833[102]

Criticism

As head of the International Rescue Committee, David Miliband has advocated for abolishing refugee camps and the accompanying material aid altogether. He argues that given the long duration of many ongoing conflicts, refugees and local economies would be better off if refugees were settled in conventional housing and given work permits, with international financial support both for refugees and local government infrastructure and educational services.[103]

Unofficial refugee settlements

Within countries experiencing large refugee in-migrations, citizen volunteers, non-governmental organizations, and refugees themselves have developed short- and long-term alternatives to official refugee camps established by governments or the UNHCR. Informal camps provide physical shelter and direct service provision but also function as a form of political activism.[104] Alternative forms of migrant settlement include squats, occupations and unofficial camps.

Asylum seekers who have been rejected and refugees without access to state services in Amsterdam worked with other migrants to create the "We are here" movement in 2012. The group set up tents on empty land and occupied empty buildings including a church, office spaces, a garage, and a former hospital. The purpose of these occupations was both for physical housing and to create space for political, cultural, and social community and events.[105]

In Brussels, Belgium, the speed of refugee processing and lack of shelters in 2015 resulted in a large number of refugees sleeping in the streets. In response, a group of Belgian citizens and collective of undocumented migrants built an informal camp in the Maximiliaan park in front of the Foreign Office and provided food, shelter, medical care, schooling, and activities such as a mobile cinema. This camp also functioned as a form of protest through its claims to space and visible location in front of government agencies.[104]

The "Jungle" in Calais, France was an unofficial refugee camp, not legally approved by local or national French authorities. Because the camp did not receive support from the state government or international aid agencies, grassroots organizations developed to manage food, donations, temporary shelters and toilets, and recreational activities within the camp. Most of the volunteers had not previously been involved in refugee aid work and were not professionals in humanitarian aid. Although filling a need for service provision, the volunteer nature of aid in informal camps resulted in a lack of accountability, reports of volunteers taking advantage of refugees, risks of violence towards volunteers, and a lack of capacity to handle complex situations within the camps such as trafficking, exploitation, and violence.[106] However, volunteer work in the Calais Jungle also functioned as a form of civil disobedience, because working within the camp fell within the definition of Article L622-1 of the French Penal Code, known as the "délit de solidarité" ("crime of solidarity"), which made it illegal to assist the "arrival, movement or residence of persons irregularly present on the French territory".[107]

See also

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