The main focus of this book is to help better understand the multidimensionality and complexity of population displacement and the role that reconstruction and recovery knowledge and practice play in this regard. According to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), the total number of people forcibly displaced due to wars and conflicts, disasters, and climate change worldwide, exceeded 66 million in 2016. Many of these displaced populations may never be able to go back and rebuild their houses, communities, and businesses.
This text brings together recovery and reconstruction professionals, researchers, and policy makers to examine how displaced populations can rebuild their lives in new locations and recover from disasters that have impacted their livelihoods, and communities. This book provides readers with an understanding of how disaster recovery and reconstruction knowledge and practice can contribute to the recovery and reconstruction of displaced and refugee populations. This book will appeal to students, researchers, and professionals working in the field.
Part1. Resettlement Challenges of Refugees.- Chapter1. Resettling Syrian Refugees in Canada: Challenges Faced by Non-Governmental Service Providers.- Chapter2. Settlement Policies for Syrian Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan: An Analysis of the Benefits and Drawbacks of Organized Camps.- Chapter3. A Landscape Perspective on the Impact of Syrian Refugees in Lebanon.- Chapter4. From emergency to integration: the spatial controversy of reception centres in Italy.- Chapter5. Disaster Vulnerability of Displaced People in Rakhine State, Myanmar.- Chapter7. A Conceptual Framework for Understanding Transformation: Transformative Adaption of refugees in Nakivale Refugee Settlement.- Chapter8. Multilevel Informality: Migration, Spatial organization and control in the Toi Market in Kibera (Nairobi).- Part2. Resettlement Challenges of Disaster Displaced Populations.- Chapter9. The lÓ+