Camps and camp-like settings in urban environments: bridging humanitarian and development activities
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DOI der Originalpublikation
Projekttyp
angewandte Forschung
Projektbeginn
01.01.2025
Projektende
31.12.2026
Projektstatus
laufend
Projektkontakt
Projektmanager:in
Beteiligte
Patterson, Ciara
Sprinceau Serghei
Grigoriu, Inga
Guigov, Alexandru
Eyadat, Zaid
Alshoubaki, Waed
Saleh, Reem
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung
This project is a response to the urgent and interconnected issues of refugee aid and urban development. It aims to tackle one of the most pressing challenges facing global society: providing refugees with life chances from the moment of displacement. It recognizes the gap between traditional refugee aid structures (camps and camp-like settings) and the current global shift towards proactive, human-centered urban development.
This project explores the connections between emergency and reception structures to bridge humanitarian and development efforts. The project fills this gap by prioritizing the role of planning. As a scientific discipline theorizing the social divide and a professional field involved in camp planning and urban development, planning can guide policy areas such as migration and asylum. This approach has the potential to facilitate a more sustainable socio-spatial and economic integration, thereby reducing the risk of exclusion and decline.
Our research targets NGOs, IOs, state and non-state actors, refugees, politicians, and urban planners. To delve into the camp's socio-spatial dynamics, we use qualitative hermeneutic methods and quantitative spatial analysis. Our research team, comprising 9 scholars (NGO workers/professionals, research fellows, and professors), is spread across our case studies in Moldova, Jordan, and Switzerland. For the scientific community, we support a reflection about camps as neighborhoods. For the professional community, we endeavour to illustrate the potential influence of planning on the social cohesiveness and urban integration of refugees.
Link
Während FHNW Zugehörigkeit erstellt
Yes
Zukunftsfelder FHNW
Hochschule
Hochschule für Soziale Arbeit
Institut
Institut Sozialplanung, Organisationaler Wandel und Stadtentwicklung
Finanziert durch
The Swiss Network for International Studies (SNIS)
Projektpartner
The State University of Moldova
The University of Jordan
Università della Svizzera Italiana (USI)
The University of Jordan
Università della Svizzera Italiana (USI)
Auftraggeberschaft
The Swiss Network for International Studies (SNIS)
SAP Referenz
S256-0149-2
Schlagwörter
Arrival cities
Arrival Infrastructure
Participatory Urbanism
Socio-spatial Integration
Humanitarian & development activities
Arrival Infrastructure
Participatory Urbanism
Socio-spatial Integration
Humanitarian & development activities
Fachgebiet (DDC)
360 - Soziale Probleme, Sozialdienste, Versicherungen