Updated
5 August 2022
| Dataset date: January 07, 2020-June 30, 2022
La méthodologie utilisée pour l’estimation des mouvements de populations a été élaborée collectivement en avril 2015 par l’ensemble des acteurs humanitaires et services étatiques. La dernière révision date de mars 2018.
Updated
5 August 2022
| Dataset date: June 01, 2021-June 30, 2022
La méthodologie utilisée pour l’estimation des mouvements de populations a été élaborée collectivement en avril 2015 par l’ensemble des acteurs humanitaires et services étatiques. La dernière révision date de mars 2018.
Updated
5 August 2022
| Dataset date: December 01, 2021-April 09, 2022
A village assessment survey (VAS) is a sub-component of mobility tracking. It collects data on returning IDPs, IDPs, returned migrants and host community members. VAS evaluates the absorption capacity of villages to receive returning IDPs with a focus on accessibility of services, livelihoods and reintegration.
Updated
5 August 2022
| Dataset date: January 01, 2019-March 31, 2022
This dataset provides information on IDP movements and spontaneous IDP returns estimations on a monthly basis. In each resource, there is a summary table for IDP arrival estimations at the governorate level since January 2016. Each resource also includes a summary table for spontaneous IDP returns estimations at the governorate level since August 2018.
Updated
3 August 2022
| Dataset date: March 02, 2018-April 18, 2022
The dataset contains number of people displaced and returnees at village level in South Kivu province. The dataset also contains needs of the displaced and returned people, reason and time of displacement.
Updated
3 August 2022
| Dataset date: October 01, 2018-April 25, 2022
The data collection exercise conducted in the villages of Aru, Djugu, Irumu, Mahagi and Mambasa territories. It contains number of IDPs, returnees and theri needs.
Updated
11 July 2022
| Dataset date: November 30, 2017-May 31, 2022
This Data is about IDP, returnees from CAR (previous IDP) and returnees from other countries repartition by origin and period of displacement and between 2013 and the date of assessment.
Evaluation has been run in 6 prefectures (admin1), 16 sub-prefectures (admin2) and 367 localities.
Updated
6 July 2022
| Dataset date: June 01, 2020-August 11, 2022
This study includes information on the population of all cities and towns outside the control of the Regime in Syria. The study is updated monthly, in that IMU enumerators of ACU track the population in all areas outside the control of the regime, along with movements of displacement and return on a permanent basis. This study also presents the total number of population and gender ratio, the total number of IDPs and the types of shelters in which they are settled, the number of newly displaced people during the last month and the types of shelters in which they are settled, the number of those who left and the reasons that forced them to leave their home towns, the number of returnees during the last month with their most critical needs. The Study presents information on the situation of the local councils in areas to which the residents returned during the past month, availability of basic services in areas of return, evaluation of these services, decision-makers and primary service providers, and sources of income for returnees.
The study data can be shown at different levels through the filter bar at the top of the page; it is also possible to display the graphic figures at three levels (district - sub-district - community) through the buttons at the bottom of the figures. Maps can be shown at two levels (district - sub-district) through the two buttons at the bottom of the map.
Data can be downloaded from the last page of the study.
For more details, please contact us through IMU email address: imu@acu-sy.org
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, 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
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
10 May 2022
| Dataset date: January 01, 2016-December 31, 2022
This data is a snapshot of the humanitarian situation in Chad. The data includes the targets that the humanitarian community will use in planning its response.
Updated
26 April 2022
| Dataset date: January 01, 2015-December 31, 2022
This data has been produced by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) on behalf of the Humanitarian Country Team and partners. The data provides the Humanitarian Country Team’s shared understanding of the crisis, including the most pressing humanitarian need and the estimated number of people who need assistance. It represents a consolidated evidence base and helps inform joint strategic response planning.
Updated
28 March 2022
| Dataset date: August 03, 2021-September 01, 2021
The dataset contains number of people displaced and returnees at village level in Tanganyika province. The dataset also contains needs of the displaced and returned people, reason and time of displacement.
Updated
9 March 2022
| Dataset date: March 15, 2021-April 20, 2021
The dataset contains number of people displaced and returnees at village level in North Kivu province. The dataset also contains needs of the displaced and returned people, reason and time of displacement.
Updated
4 February 2022
| Dataset date: January 01, 2019-December 31, 2019
DTM in Yemen includes the monitoring of key migrant and return locations on Yemen's northern border with Saudi Arabia and southern coastal border. DTM monitors the arrivals of migrants and Yemeni nationals in order to identify different patterns and types of migration. IOM estimates that 6,589 migrants entered Yemen in addition to 2,819 Yemeni returns from Saudia Arabia during November 2019 bringing the number of migrants who have arrived in Yemen in 2019 to 127,275 and the number of Yemeni returnees to 44,777