Updated
24 June 2022
| Dataset date: February 01, 2020-September 30, 2021
The dataset has IDPs households and individuals with age and gender disaggregated data at sub national level. A site assessment is a sub-component of mobility tracking. It aims to collect data on population presence, living conditions and needs in a particular displacement site or community.
Updated
24 June 2022
| Dataset date: December 31, 2017-April 30, 2022
The dataset contains IDPs, returnees at sub national level. The dataset also has reason of displacement, origin and dates of multiple displacements.
The context of displacement in Mali remains complex and fluid. Movements of IDPs currently residing in the southern regions to the northern regions continue to be reported. While some have indicated that they have returned definitively, other IDPs say they travel back and forth between the place of travel and the place of origin.
Updated
23 June 2022
| Dataset date: January 01, 2015-January 11, 2022
In response to the need for accurate information on internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Nigeria, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) began implementing the Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) project in July 2014. The project is supporting the Government of Nigeria and other humanitarian response partners to conduct IDPs assessments in a systematic way as well as to establish a profile of the IDP population.
Updated
23 June 2022
| Dataset date: November 01, 2016-January 13, 2022
DTM location assessment is to collect data on population presence in defined locations identified through the baseline area assessment. The assessment identifies where people are living and informs targets sites for more detailed site assessments.
Updated
23 June 2022
| Dataset date: March 26, 2019-October 01, 2021
Tropical Cyclone Idai made landfall in central Mozambique the night of 14 March 2019. On 27 March 2019, IOM in
coordination with the Government of Mozambique carried out site assessments in 32 evacuation sites in the Beira district in
the Sofala province of Mozambique one of the provinces affected by the storm.
Updated
23 June 2022
| Dataset date: May 16, 2022-June 11, 2022
A baseline assessment is a sub-component of mobility tracking. It aims to collect data on IDP, migrant or returnee population presence in a defined administrative area of the country.
Updated
23 June 2022
| Dataset date: February 24, 2022-June 11, 2022
Between 1 and 11 June the International Organization for Migration (IOM) conducted an area baseline assessment of 728 hromadas* hosting IDPs in Zakarpatska, Lvivska, Ivano-Frankivska, Chernivetska, Kirovohradska, Kyivska, Odeska, Ternopilska, Vinnytska, Volynska, Khmelnytska, Zhytomyrska, and Poltavska oblasts in order to gather initial trends on the number and geographic location of officially recorded internally displaced persons.
This routine assessment supports the targeting and provision of humanitarian assistance to the affected population and serves as a preliminary source to identify oblasts and hromadas hosting high numbers of IDPs.
IOM compiled information on more than 1,400,000 IDPs in the 13 oblasts covered by Round 5 of DTM Area Baseline. Poltavska, Zakarpatska, and Lviviska oblasts have the highest number of displaced each hosting over 140,000 IDPs.
Updated
23 June 2022
| Dataset date: January 01, 2019-June 18, 2022
DTM’s Displacement Tracking tool collects and reports on displaced numbers of households on a daily basis, allowing for regular reporting of new displacements in terms of numbers, geography and needs. More than 3.6 million people are displaced as per August 2018 assessment.
Updated
22 June 2022
| Dataset date: December 01, 2015-January 31, 2022
This datasets has IDPs, Household & Returnees data at Admin3 level gathered through DTM Mobility Tracking Assessment.
In the context of the political instability that has prevailed since the uprising in Libya (October 2011) and culminated in the collapse of a fragile central authority accompanied by fragmentation and infighting among myriads of militias, with continued fighting since the mid-2014 escalations, estimates indicate that the number of Internally Displaced Per-sons (IDPs) in Libya has exceeded 400,000 individuals, some eight percent of the total population (HNO, September 2015). While the country struggles to achieve and maintain stability, thousands of migrants are also taking journeys to and through Libya in a desperate bid to seek a better life in Europe. These migrants are exposed to risks of being trafficked and exploited while traveling through dangerous routes in deserts and territories controlled by different armed groups, as well as dying during attempts to cross the Mediterranean Sea.
However, there has been no standardized mechanism in place to verify and regularly update IDP and migrant numbers. Given that most humanitarian and international organizations operate remotely from Tunis since mid-July 2014 due to the deteriorating security situation, maintaining access to reliable and updated data on the humanitarian situation in Libya has been challenging.
Updated
22 June 2022
| Dataset date: December 22, 2020-February 15, 2022
In early November 2020, conflict broke out in the north of Ethiopia and this has displaced many from their homes. From 11 December — 14 January 2021, the Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) deployed its Emergecny Site Assessment to capture internal displacement related to the Northern Ethiopia Crisis. This multisectoral location assessment assesses the number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) and collects basic information on the multisectoral needs of IDPs at site level.
Updated
22 June 2022
| Dataset date: September 04, 2019-September 11, 2021
The datasets cover the period of 4 September 2019 - 11 September 2021 and includes the states mostly affected by displacement including Benue,Nasarawa, Kaduna, Kano, Katsina, Plateau, Sokoto and Zamfara.
Updated
22 June 2022
| Dataset date: September 04, 2019-September 11, 2021
The datasets cover the period of 4 September 2019 - 11 September 2021 and includes the states mostly affected by displacement including Benue,Nasarawa, Kaduna, Kano, Katsina, Plateau, Sokoto and Zamfara.
Updated
22 June 2022
| Dataset date: November 11, 2021-March 31, 2022
The dataset has displaced location of IDPs & households. Last displacement at Governorates (admin1) level, shelter type and period of last displacement.
Updated
22 June 2022
| Dataset date: August 21, 2017-December 27, 2021
A site assessment is a sub-component of mobility tracking. It aims to collect data on population presence, living conditions and needs in a particular displacement site or community.
Updated
21 June 2022
| Dataset date: November 10, 2015-February 16, 2022
The dataset contains IDPs, Returnees and Refugees at sub national level with information on IDPs in camps and host communities.
IOM set up and rolled out the first round of the DTM in November 2015 with the objective of providing regular, accurate and updated information on displaced populations within the Far North region of Cameroon to better support the response of the Government of Cameroon and the humanitarian community.
Updated
21 June 2022
| Dataset date: November 10, 2021-December 20, 2021
Primary data collection employed a key informant (KI) methodology with KI interviews conducted by REACH and CCCM Partners enumerators in locations directly accessible by REACH Field Officers (FOs) and by CCCM partner organizations. The geographical scope of DSA V will be built up around the October 2021 IDP master list which lists a total of 3,589 IDP sites across all regions of Somalia. Following identification of target urban areas, REACH located IDP settlement using very high spatial resolution (VHSR) satellite imagery as available on Google Earth prior to the start of the data collection. After identifying target areas and verifying the existence of IDP settlements, REACH contacted the lowest level of governance (district’s office, mayor’s office, etc.) to triangulate information about settlement location.
Updated
19 June 2022
| Dataset date: January 01, 2009-December 31, 2021
Internally displaced persons are defined according to the 1998 Guiding Principles (http://www.internal-displacement.org/publications/1998/ocha-guiding-principles-on-internal-displacement) as people or groups of people who have been forced or obliged to flee or to leave their homes or places of habitual residence, in particular as a result of armed conflict, or to avoid the effects of armed conflict, situations of generalized violence, violations of human rights, or natural or human-made disasters and who have not crossed an international border.
"People Displaced" refers to the number of people living in displacement as of the end of each year.
"New Displacement" refers to the number of new cases or incidents of displacement recorded, rather than the number of people displaced. This is done because people may have been displaced more than once.
Contains data from IDMC's Global Internal Displacement Database.
Updated
19 June 2022
| Dataset date: January 01, 2008-December 31, 2021
Internally displaced persons are defined according to the 1998 Guiding Principles (http://www.internal-displacement.org/publications/1998/ocha-guiding-principles-on-internal-displacement) as people or groups of people who have been forced or obliged to flee or to leave their homes or places of habitual residence, in particular as a result of armed conflict, or to avoid the effects of armed conflict, situations of generalized violence, violations of human rights, or natural or human-made disasters and who have not crossed an international border.
"People Displaced" refers to the number of people living in displacement as of the end of each year.
"New Displacement" refers to the number of new cases or incidents of displacement recorded, rather than the number of people displaced. This is done because people may have been displaced more than once.
Contains data from IDMC's Global Internal Displacement Database.