Refine your search: Clear all
Featured:
Data series [?]:
Locations:
More
Formats:
More
Organisations:
Tags:
More
Licenses:
  • 100+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: June 30, 2010-November 24, 2024 ... More
    Modified [?]: 1 December 2024
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 13 September 2024
    This dataset updates: Every week
    This dataset comes from the International Organization for Migration (IOM)'s displacement tracking matrix (DTM) publicly accessible API. This API allows the humanitarian community, academia, media, government, and non-governmental organizations to utilize the data collected by DTM. The DTM API only provides non-sensitive IDP figures, aggregated at the country, Admin 1 (states, provinces, or equivalent), and Admin 2 (smaller subnational administrative areas) levels. For more detailed information, please see the country-specific DTM datasets on HDX.
  • 300+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 29, 2023-November 22, 2024 ... More
    Modified [?]: 27 November 2024
    Confirmed [?]: 27 November 2024
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 30 May 2024
    This dataset updates: Every month
    This dataset provides an overview of the total population of internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Sudan, including those displaced both before and after the onset of conflict on 15 April 2023. The displacement crisis in Sudan has been unfolding for over two decades, with roots in the Darfur conflict beginning in 2003. Prior to the onset of conflict on 15 April 2023, Sudan already hosted an estimated 3,820,772 IDPs. The majority (80%) reportedly originated from Darfur states, and most were initially displaced between 2003 and 2010.
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: February 11, 2024-March 07, 2024 ... More
    Modified [?]: 7 November 2024
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 7 November 2024
    This dataset updates: Every three months
    The Humanitarian Situation Monitoring (HSM) is a quarterly community-level multi-sectoral needs assessment. It builds upon the previously implemented Hard-to-Reach assessment and expanded its geographic coverage to encompass the entire country in early 2022, due to the shift in context. HSM aims to collect and then triangulate information regarding service provision, sectoral needs, and vulnerabilities in Afghan communities regularly, in order to support geographical and sectoral prioritizations, particularly in light of the rapidly evolving context in Afghanistan. HSM assesses the sectoral and multi-sectoral needs of populations in all districts by filling in information gaps and enhancing response capacity for district-level prioritization.
  • 6000+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: April 15, 2023-April 25, 2024 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 May 2024
    Confirmed [?]: 12 August 2024
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 2 May 2023
    This dataset updates: As needed
    The information in this dataset has been collected through key informants and might rapidly change. From 15 April 2023, armed clashes erupted between the Sudanese Army Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in multiple cities across Sudan, including Khartoum, Al Fasher, Merowe, Nyala, Ag Geneina, and El Obeid – among others. DTM Sudan has been receiving reports of widespread displacement across different states in Sudan due to the ongoing security situation. Locations of displacement have been reported in 14 of Sudan’s 18 states. Namely, these include the states of Khartoum, Northern, River Nile, Aj Jazirah, North Kordofan, White Nile, Sennar, Blue Nile, North Darfur, South Darfur, West Darfur, Central Darfur, Kassala, and Red Sea. Field teams have also reported that inter communal conflict has picked up again between the Masalit and the Arabs has restarted in West Darfur.
  • 300+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: April 16, 2023-June 04, 2023 ... More
    Modified [?]: 6 June 2023
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 1 May 2023
    This dataset updates: As needed
    The Relief and Rehabilitation Commission (RRC), UNHCR and IOM dataset tracks the movement of people from Sudan to South Sudan. The data is collected daily through a number of points of entry along the border of Sudan to South Sudan. Since 16 April 2023, South Sudan has received thousands of new arrivals.
  • 100+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: April 16, 2023-December 08, 2024 ... More
    Modified [?]: 25 May 2023
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 18 May 2023
    This dataset updates: Every day
    Following the outbreak of armed conflict in Sudan on 15 April 2023, large numbers of civilians have been forced to flee, including people who were already internally displaced because of previous conflicts in Sudan and refugees from other countries who had sought safety in Sudan. In addition to new internal displacement, hundreds of thousands of people, including Sudanese refugees and refugees of other nationalities hosted by Sudan have fled Sudan to neighbouring countries or returned home in adverse circumstances – notably to Chad, South Sudan, the Central African Republic, Egypt and Ethiopia. UNHCR Operational Data Portal for the Sudan Situation: https://data.unhcr.org/en/situations/sudansituation
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: November 19, 2016-November 30, 2016 ... More
    Modified [?]: 19 December 2022
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 7 February 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Socioeconomic assessment of Refugees
    Due to persistent instability in the region, Cameroon hosts refugees and asylum seekers from neighboring countries, mainly from the Central African Republic and Nigeria. In 2015, nearly 259,000 Central African refugees arrived in Cameroon, of whom the vast majority settled in the Northern, Eastern and Adamaoua regions. Within these regions, the study identified 11 subsistence zones, of which the 5 zones with the highest refugee concentration were surveyed, in order to inform UNHCR's Livelihoods Strategy 2017-2020 targeting these refugees and to provide a baseline against which to measure the success of its implementation. The survey was conducted among 2,206 refugee households in November 2016. The household data is supplemented with UNHCRs progress data for the purpose of refining the targeting approach of both WFP and UNHCR.
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: April 22, 2016-May 15, 2016 ... More
    Modified [?]: 19 December 2022
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 7 February 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Socioeconomic assessment of Refugees
    As a consequence of the armed conflict in the Gao, Kidal and Timbuktu regions of Mali, an estimated 32,000 Malian refugees have settled in Burkina Faso. Since 2012, UNHCR has been providing protection and assistance to these Malian refugees through multisectoral interventions. In order to assess the levels of vulnerability among these refugees and to identify potential opportunities for increasing their resilience, a quantitative survey was conducted among 6,775 Malian refugee households during April/May 2016.
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: November 19, 2016-November 30, 2016 ... More
    Modified [?]: 14 December 2022
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 14 December 2022
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Socioeconomic assessment of Refugees
    Due to persistent instability in the region, Cameroon hosts refugees and asylum seekers from neighboring countries, mainly from the Central African Republic and Nigeria. In 2015, nearly 259,000 Central African refugees arrived in Cameroon, of whom the vast majority settled in the Northern, Eastern and Adamaoua regions. Within these regions, the study identified 11 subsistence zones, of which the 5 zones with the highest refugee concentration were surveyed, in order to inform UNHCR's Livelihoods Strategy 2017-2020 targeting these refugees and to provide a baseline against which to measure the success of its implementation. The survey was conducted among 2,206 refugee households in November 2016.
  • 30+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: October 21, 2019-December 18, 2019 ... More
    Modified [?]: 16 March 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Socioeconomic assessment of Refugees
    Since 1992, Kenya has been a generous host of refugees and asylum seekers, a population which today exceeds 500,000 people. The Kakuma Refugee Camps have long been among the largest hosting sites (about 40% of the total refugees in Kenya), and have become even larger in recent years, with an estimated 67 percent of the current refugee population arriving in the past five years. In 2015, UNHCR, the Government of Kenya, and partners established Kalobeyei Settlement, located 40 kilometers north of Kakuma, to reduce the population burden on the other camps and facilitate a shift towards an area-based development model that addresses the longer term prospects of both refugees and the host community. The refugee population makes up a significant share of the local population (an estimated 40 percent at the district level) and economy, engendering both positive and negative impacts on local Kenyans. While Kenya has emerged as a leader in measuring the impacts of forced displacement, refugees are not systematically included in the national household surveys that serve as the primary tools for measuring and monitoring poverty, labor markets and other welfare indicators at a country-wide level. As a result, comparison of poverty and vulnerability between refugees, host communities and nationals remains difficult. Initiated jointly by UNHCR and the World Bank, this survey replicates the preceding Kalobeyei SES (2018), designed to address these shortcomings and support the wider global vision laid out by the Global Refugee Compact and the Sustainable Development Goals. Data was collected in October 2019 to December 2019, covering about 2,122 households.
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: November 22, 2018-January 17, 2019 ... More
    Modified [?]: 6 May 2020
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 7 February 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Socioeconomic assessment of Refugees
    Since 1992, Kenya has been a generous host of refugees and asylum seekers, a population which today exceeds 470,000 people. The Kakuma Refugee Camps have long been among the largest hosting sites, and have become even larger in recent years, with an estimated 67 percent of the current refugee population arriving in the past five years. In 2015, UNHCR, the Government of Kenya, and partners established Kalobeyei Settlement, located 40 kilometers north of Kakuma, to reduce the population burden on the other camps and facilitate a shift towards an area-based development model that addresses the longer term prospects of both refugees and the host community. The refugee population makes up a significant share of the local population (an estimated 40 percent at the district level) and economy, engendering both positive and negative impacts on local Kenyans. While Kenya has emerged as a leader in measuring the impacts of forced displacement, refugees are not systematically included in the national household surveys that serve as the primary tools for measuring and monitoring poverty, labor markets and other welfare indicators at a country-wide level. As a result, comparison of poverty and vulnerability between refugees, host communities and nationals remains difficult. Initiated jointly by UNHCR and the World Bank, this survey was designed to address these shortcomings and support the settlement's development framework, as well as the wider global vision laid out by the Global Refugee Compact and the Sustainable Development Goals. Data were collected in November 2018 to January 2019, covering about 6004 households.
  • 20+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: June 17, 2017-August 04, 2017 ... More
    Modified [?]: 16 January 2020
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 4 July 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Socioeconomic assessment of Refugees
    The long-term presence of refugees in Chad and the reduction in funding to provide assistance in recent years have led the humanitarian community to reconsider the approach to assistance of these populations. WFP and UNHCR, the Government's main partners in providing assistance to refugees, had conducted a "socio-economic categorization" in 2014 and 2015 in some refugee camps, and an update was decided for 2017. This update was designed to go beyond a simple categorization and focuses on identifying profiles of refugee households that can be empowered in the short to medium term and the factors that can foster this empowerment. The assessment covers 87,724 refugee households in Chad and was carried out during June-August 2017.
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: October 23, 2017-October 27, 2017 ... More
    Modified [?]: 16 January 2020
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 7 February 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Socioeconomic assessment of Refugees
    This assessment was carried out in Zimbabwe's Tongogara Refugee Camp. Its aim was to help UNHCR better understand refugees' and asylum seekers' living conditions and needs, which in turn will inform priority setting, programming and advocacy. The assessment was underpinned by the objectives of the "Graduation Approach" which targets support to the ultra-poor amongst the refugee population. A quantitative survey was conducted among 386 households during October 2017.
  • 30+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2017-December 31, 2017 ... More
    Modified [?]: 5 December 2019
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 July 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Socioeconomic assessment of Refugees
    At the end of 2015, Herat Province was among the highest IDP hosting provinces in Afghanistan, accounting for approximately 10% of the country's IDP population. In order to obtain reliable information on the socio-economic conditions of IDPs and returnees in Herat Province, a comprehensive sample survey was carried out among 11,264 households in the 5 most populated IDP/returnee settlements (Shagofan, Jebraiel, Maslakh, Now Abad and Kahdistan) in 2017.
  • 30+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: March 06, 2017-March 29, 2017 ... More
    Modified [?]: 5 December 2019
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 7 February 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Socioeconomic assessment of Refugees
    This survey was conducted to help UNHCR's Malawi office in its multi-year, multi-partnership planning and programming. The main objective was to provide an overview of the livelihood and vulnerability situation of refugees and host families in Malawi. The survey covered Dzaleka and Luwani refugee camps as well as households living in villages surrounding the two camps. Dzaleka camp is well established and has been in existence since 1994 and hosts households from a number of neighboring countries, including Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Burundi and others. Luwani camp is relatively new and much smaller camp that hosts exclusively Mozambican asylum seekers whose status was not yet determined at the time of the survey. The survey covered 1,026 refugee households (802 in Dzaleka and 224 in Luwani) during March 2017.
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: May 11, 2017-May 29, 2017 ... More
    Modified [?]: 5 December 2019
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 21 February 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    Afghanistan hosts a protracted population of Pakistani refugees, who fled North Waziristan Agency in 2014 as a result of a joint military offensive by Pakistani government forces against non-state armed groups. As of May 2017, UNHCR has biometrically registered over 50,000 refugees in Khost province and 36,000 refugees in Paktika province, where access remains a challenge. Over 16,000 of these refugees receive shelter and essential services in the Gulan camp in Khost province, while most of the others live among the host population in various urban and rural locations. To better understand the needs of the refugees and the host communities, UNHCR and WFP agreed to conduct a joint assessment of Pakistani refugees in Khost and Paktika. The data collection commenced in May 2017 and covered 2,638 refugee households (2,198 in Khost and 440 in Paktika).
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: May 05, 2016-May 25, 2016 ... More
    Modified [?]: 5 December 2019
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 25 December 2022
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Socioeconomic assessment of Refugees
    There is a growing interest in the consequences of hosting refugees for local populations. Such consequences need not to be unfavorable and in many instances the presence of refugees results in direct and indirect benefits for host communities. This survey was conducted to examine the influence of Congolese refugees on host communities in Rwanda, with a focus on labor market activity and economic welfare. The survey covered three refugee camps as well as their surrounding host communities. Data was collected in May 2016 and covers 427 refugee households and 953 host households.