UNHCR - The UN Refugee Agency

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  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2019-December 31, 2019 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 April 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Energy Monitoring Framework Survey
    The UNHCR Energy Monitoring Framework takes a program-based approach to monitoring, with the aim of tracking both outputs and the impact of UNHCR dollars spent on programming (either via partners or through direct implementation). The process for developing the indicators began in 2015 with a review of existing tools and approaches and consultations with Government, Private Sector, field-based staff and NGO partners to devise a set of common, standardized measures rooted in global good practices. More info is available on the official website: https://eis.unhcr.org/
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2019-December 31, 2019 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 April 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Energy Monitoring Framework Survey
    The UNHCR Energy Monitoring Framework takes a program-based approach to monitoring, with the aim of tracking both outputs and the impact of UNHCR dollars spent on programming (either via partners or through direct implementation). The process for developing the indicators began in 2015 with a review of existing tools and approaches and consultations with Government, Private Sector, field-based staff and NGO partners to devise a set of common, standardized measures rooted in global good practices. More info is available on the official website: https://eis.unhcr.org/
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2018-December 31, 2018 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 April 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Energy Monitoring Framework Survey
    The UNHCR Energy Monitoring Framework takes a program-based approach to monitoring, with the aim of tracking both outputs and the impact of UNHCR dollars spent on programming (either via partners or through direct implementation). The process for developing the indicators began in 2015 with a review of existing tools and approaches and consultations with Government, Private Sector, field-based staff and NGO partners to devise a set of common, standardized measures rooted in global good practices. More info is available on the official website: https://eis.unhcr.org/
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2019-December 31, 2019 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 April 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Energy Monitoring Framework Survey
    The UNHCR Energy Monitoring Framework takes a program-based approach to monitoring, with the aim of tracking both outputs and the impact of UNHCR dollars spent on programming (either via partners or through direct implementation). The process for developing the indicators began in 2015 with a review of existing tools and approaches and consultations with Government, Private Sector, field-based staff and NGO partners to devise a set of common, standardized measures rooted in global good practices. More info is available on the official website: https://eis.unhcr.org/
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2018-December 31, 2018 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 April 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Energy Monitoring Framework Survey
    The UNHCR Energy Monitoring Framework takes a program-based approach to monitoring, with the aim of tracking both outputs and the impact of UNHCR dollars spent on programming (either via partners or through direct implementation). The process for developing the indicators began in 2015 with a review of existing tools and approaches and consultations with Government, Private Sector, field-based staff and NGO partners to devise a set of common, standardized measures rooted in global good practices. More info is available on the official website: https://eis.unhcr.org/
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2019-December 31, 2019 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 April 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Energy Monitoring Framework Survey
    The UNHCR Energy Monitoring Framework takes a program-based approach to monitoring, with the aim of tracking both outputs and the impact of UNHCR dollars spent on programming (either via partners or through direct implementation). The process for developing the indicators began in 2015 with a review of existing tools and approaches and consultations with Government, Private Sector, field-based staff and NGO partners to devise a set of common, standardized measures rooted in global good practices. More info is available on the official website: https://eis.unhcr.org/
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2018-December 31, 2018 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 April 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Energy Monitoring Framework Survey
    The UNHCR Energy Monitoring Framework takes a program-based approach to monitoring, with the aim of tracking both outputs and the impact of UNHCR dollars spent on programming (either via partners or through direct implementation). The process for developing the indicators began in 2015 with a review of existing tools and approaches and consultations with Government, Private Sector, field-based staff and NGO partners to devise a set of common, standardized measures rooted in global good practices. More info is available on the official website: https://eis.unhcr.org/
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2017-December 31, 2017 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 April 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Energy Monitoring Framework Survey
    The UNHCR Energy Monitoring Framework takes a program-based approach to monitoring, with the aim of tracking both outputs and the impact of UNHCR dollars spent on programming (either via partners or through direct implementation). The process for developing the indicators began in 2015 with a review of existing tools and approaches and consultations with Government, Private Sector, field-based staff and NGO partners to devise a set of common, standardized measures rooted in global good practices. More info is available on the official website: https://eis.unhcr.org/
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2018-December 31, 2018 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 April 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Energy Monitoring Framework Survey
    The UNHCR Energy Monitoring Framework takes a program-based approach to monitoring, with the aim of tracking both outputs and the impact of UNHCR dollars spent on programming (either via partners or through direct implementation). The process for developing the indicators began in 2015 with a review of existing tools and approaches and consultations with Government, Private Sector, field-based staff and NGO partners to devise a set of common, standardized measures rooted in global good practices. More info is available on the official website: https://eis.unhcr.org/
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: September 15, 2020-October 15, 2020 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    The Monitoring of the Effects of the Economic Deterioration on Refugee Households dataset is a Phone survey of Syrian and non-Syrian households to monitor the changes over time in key areas in the context of the deteriorating economic situation in Lebanon. This wave focuses on: livelihoods, economic vulnerability, living conditions, access to health services, food and livelihood coping strategies, covid-19. This dataset includes only the non-Syrian refugees cases.
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: September 15, 2020-October 15, 2020 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    The Monitoring of the Effects of the Economic Deterioration on Refugee Households dataset is a Phone survey of Syrian and non-Syrian households to monitor the changes over time in key areas in the context of the deteriorating economic situation in Lebanon. This wave focuses on: livelihoods, economic vulnerability, living conditions, access to health services, food and livelihood coping strategies, covid-19. This dataset includes only the Syrian refugees cases.
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2019-December 31, 2019 ... More
    Modified [?]: 9 April 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 11 April 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Energy Monitoring Framework Survey
    The UNHCR Energy Monitoring Framework takes a program-based approach to monitoring, with the aim of tracking both outputs and the impact of UNHCR dollars spent on programming (either via partners or through direct implementation). The process for developing the indicators began in 2015 with a review of existing tools and approaches and consultations with Government, Private Sector, field-based staff and NGO partners to devise a set of common, standardized measures rooted in global good practices. More info is available on the official website: https://eis.unhcr.org/
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: September 24, 2020-November 30, 2020 ... More
    Modified [?]: 26 March 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Post Distribution Monitoring of Non-Food Items
    UNHCR uses Post Distribution Monitoring (PDM) as a mechanism to collect refugees' feedback on the quality, sufficiency, utilization and effectiveness of the assistance items they receive. The underlying principle behind the process is linked to accountability, as well as a commitment to improve the quality and relevance of support provided, and related services. Usually the surveys that form the basis of the assessment are conducted soon after the distribution of relief items is completed. For this assessment, 1791 women recepients of menstrual hygiene management kits were interviewed, 1607 of whom answered questions about sanitary pads and underwear. 215 men were interviewed, 182 of whom answered questions about sanitary pads and underwear. These responses were excluded from the analysis.
  • 20+ 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.
  • 20+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: July 23, 2018-September 03, 2019 ... More
    Modified [?]: 28 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 28 February 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    Since the onset of the Syrian crisis, the humanitarian community has increasingly relied on cash-based assistance provided from donor contributions and implemented by aid partners under the Lebanon Crisis Response Plan to support the affected population. In November 2017, the World Food Programme (WFP) joined the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and non-governmental organisations (NGO) in the delivery of multi-purpose cash (MPC) to assist the most economically vulnerable Syrian refugee households to meet their basic needs. This study aims to measure the short-term (12 months or less) and long-term (more than 12 months) causal impact of the $173.50 and $175 MPC assistance provided by WFP and UNHCR respectively, over and above the $27 per person per month assistance, as well as the impact of discontinuation from MPC on the well-being of Syrian refugees. This report presents the causal impact on multiple dimensions of well-being, namely household expenditures, food security, housing, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), education, employment, health and decision-making. The key take-away messages from the study are: 1. The impact of MPC materialised across most dimensions of well-being in the long-term, indicating the importance of households' access to a longer duration of MPC. 2. The benefits of MPC fade for many indicators within 4 to 10 months after discontinuation, and households' well-being returned to pre-assistance levels for most indicators, and dropped slightly below the pre-assistance baseline for others. 3. The findings would suggest that there are benefits to instituting longer cash cycles and/or linking MPC to other services through a 'cash plus' approach to expand and extend the positive impact of cash on beneficiary households and ensure sustainable impact. A total of 11,457 households were visited and used in this analysis, which constitutes one of the largest samples among impact evaluations conducted in Lebanon to date.
  • 40+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: May 14, 2020-July 07, 2020 ... More
    Modified [?]: 28 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 28 February 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Kenya - Socio-economic impact of COVID-19 on refugees
    The participants of this phone interview were identified using mixed methods. Stratified random sampling were adopted for PoCs based in Kakuma, Kalobeyei, Dadaab and Urban areas. While a census were used for all PoCs who were 18+ years amongst the Shona community; this cohort forms 48.6% of the enumerated population of the Shona people. The survey was conducted at two levels; household and individual.
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: May 14, 2020-July 07, 2020 ... More
    Modified [?]: 26 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Kenya - Socio-economic impact of COVID-19 on refugees
    The World Bank and UNHCR in collaboration with the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics and the University of California, Berkeley are conducting the Kenya COVID-19 Rapid Response Phone Survey to track the socioeconomic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, the recovery from it as well as other shocks to provide timely data to inform a targeted response. This dataset contains information from eight waves of the COVID-19 RRPS, which is part of a panel survey that targets refugee household and started in May 2020. The same households were interviewed every two months for five survey rounds, in the first year of data collection, and every four months thereafter, with interviews conducted using Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI) techniques. The sample aims to be representative of the refugee and stateless population in Kenya. It comprises five strata: Kakuma refugee camp, Kalobeyei settlement, Dadaab refugee camp, urban refugees, and Shona stateless. Waves 1-7 of this survey include information on household background, service access, employment, food security, income loss, transfers, health, and COVID-19 knowledge. Wave 8 focused on how households were exposed to shocks, in particular adverse weather shocks and the increase in the price of food and fuel, but also included parts of the previous modules on household background, service access, employment, food security, income loss, and subjective wellbeing. The data is uploaded in three files. The first is the hh file, which contains household level information. The 'hhid', uniquely identifies all household. The second is the adult level file, which contains data at the level of adult household members. Each adult in a household is uniquely identified by the 'adult_id'. The third file is the child level file, available only for waves 3-7, which contains information for every child in the household. Each child in a household is uniquely identified by the 'child_id'. The duration of data collection and sample size for each completed wave was: Wave 1: May 14 to July 7, 2020; 1,328 refugee households Wave 2: July 16 to September 18, 2020; 1,699 refugee households Wave 3: September 28 to December 2, 2020; 1,487 refugee households Wave 4: January 15 to March 25, 2021; 1,376 refugee households Wave 5: March 29 to June 13, 2021; 1,562 refugee households Wave 6: July 14 to November 3, 2021; 1,407 refugee households Wave 7: November 15, 2021, to March 31, 2022; 1,281 refugee households Wave 8: May 31 to July 8, 2022: 1,355 refugee households The same questionnaire is also administered to nationals in Kenya, with the data available in the WB microdata library: https://microdata.worldbank.org/index.php/catalog/3774
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: October 26, 2020-November 16, 2020 ... More
    Modified [?]: 23 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Post-Distribution Monitoring of Cash-Based Intervention
    These data were produced from a household survey that was part of the post-distribtion monitoring exercise for a cash-based intervention (CBI) in Dzaleka Refugee Camp, Dowa district of Malawi. The CBI was intended to provide consumption support to extremely poor households who graduated from the livelihoods programme. A cohort graduates from the programme after 18 months of active participation. Participants are selected from extremely poor households who live below the poverty line and often times engaged in negative coping mechanisms to meet their basic needs. The consumption support is meant as a cushion for their basic needs as they continue participating in various livelihoods activities. Consumption support has a time frame of 12 months for each participating cohort. The target groups involve persons of concern (POCs) and host communities. After 12 months, it is assumed that participants have started generating enough income to cushion for their basic needs including further investments through diversification into additional livelihoods activities. Out of the 449 households that received the CBI, 264 were randomly sampled for this post-distrubtion monitoring exercise. The total population in Dzaleka camp is 48,557.
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2017-December 31, 2017 ... More
    Modified [?]: 21 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 21 February 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    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.
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: July 15, 2020-September 29, 2021 ... More
    Modified [?]: 19 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    Assessment of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on food security, livelihoods and local markets for refugees in urban areas.
  • 20+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: May 27, 2019-July 05, 2019 ... More
    Modified [?]: 18 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 7 February 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    In 2016, UNHCR became aware of a group of stateless persons living in or near Nairobi, Kenya. Most of them were Shona, descendants of missionaries who arrived from Zimbabwe and Zambia in the 1960s and remained in Kenya. The total number of Shona living in Kenya is estimated to be between 3,000 and 3,500 people. On their first arrival, the Shona were issued certificates of registration, but a change in the Registration of Persons Act of 1978 did not make provision for people of non-Kenyan descent, consequently denying the Shona citizenship. Zimbabwe and Zambia did not consider them nationals either, rendering them stateless. Besides the Shona, there are other groups of stateless persons of different origins and ethnicities, with the total number of stateless persons in Kenya estimated at 18,500. UNHCR and the Government of Kenya are taking steps to address statelessness in the country, among them is the registration of selected groups for nationalization. In April 2019, the Government of Kenya pledged to recognize qualifying members of the Shona community as Kenyan citizens. However, the lack of detailed information on the stateless population in Kenya hinders advocacy for the regularization of their nationality status. Together with the Kenyan Government through the Department of Immigration Services (DIS) and the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS), UNHCR Kenya conducted registration and socioeconomic survey for the Shona community from May to July 2019. While the primary objective of the registration was to document migration, residence and family history with the aim of preparing their registration as citizens, this survey was conducted to provide a baseline on the socio-economic situation of the stateless Shona population for comparison with non-stateless populations of Kenya.
  • 50+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: July 29, 2021-August 11, 2021 ... More
    Modified [?]: 17 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    UNHCR uses Post Distribution Monitoring (PDM) as a mechanism to collect refugees' feedback on the quality, sufficiency, utilization and effectiveness of the assistance items they receive. The underlying principle behind the process is linked to accountability, as well as a commitment to improve the quality and relevance of support provided, and related services. Usually the surveys that form the basis of the assessment are conducted soon after the distribution of relief items is completed. Four PDMs on Non-Food Items (NFI) have been conducted since 2018. One in March 2018 covering the period from the beginning of the refugee influx in August/September 2017, and the second one in August 2018 covering distributions made during the monsoon season that year. A third PDM exercise covered the period from September 2018 up to March 2019. And a fourth one in November 2019 covered the period from April to November 2019. The current PDM survey and recommendations cover the period from November 2019 up to July 2020. This PDM exercise was initially planned in April 2020, however, it was delayed due to the lockdown imposed at the beginning of COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 1,166 households that had received NFIs from UNHCR took part in this PDM exercise. The findings from this report will be used in improving further upcoming distributions in 2020 and take into consideration lessons learned from COVID-19's impact on the distribution process. This fifth PDM survey and exercise covers the distribution of six types of NFI assistance provided through UNHCR and its partners in 2020. It includes Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG)5, Core Relief Item kits (CRI)6, WASH Hygiene kits7, Compressed Rice Husks (CRH)8 and shelter repair and replacement assistance9
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2019-December 31, 2020 ... More
    Modified [?]: 16 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Jordan Home Visits Survey
    It is increasingly recognised that the majority of the world's refugees reside not in camps, but dispersed amongst the community in the countries where they have sought asylum. This is the case for Syrian refugees in Jordan, of which 84% live outside official refugee camps in urban and rural areas across the country. Understanding the needs, vulnerabilities and capacities of this dispersed refugee population is vital to ensuring their protection and access to services. The purpose of this dataset is to examine the situation of Syrian refugees living outside camps in Jordan, based on data collected through UNHCR's Home Visits programme. Under this programme, interviews are conducted with every refugee household registering with UNHCR outside camps. This provides an unparalleled source of information about the situation of Syrian refugees in non-camp settings.
  • Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2018-December 31, 2018 ... More
    Modified [?]: 16 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Jordan Home Visits Survey
    It is increasingly recognised that the majority of the world's refugees reside not in camps, but dispersed amongst the community in the countries where they have sought asylum. This is the case for Syrian refugees in Jordan, of which 84% live outside official refugee camps in urban and rural areas across the country. Understanding the needs, vulnerabilities and capacities of this dispersed refugee population is vital to ensuring their protection and access to services. The purpose of this dataset is to examine the situation of Syrian refugees living outside camps in Jordan, based on data collected through UNHCR's Home Visits programme. Under this programme, interviews are conducted with every refugee household registering with UNHCR outside camps. This provides an unparalleled source of information about the situation of Syrian refugees in non-camp settings.
  • 10+ Downloads
    Time Period of the Dataset [?]: January 01, 2019-December 31, 2019 ... More
    Modified [?]: 16 February 2021
    Dataset Added on HDX [?]: 26 May 2021
    This dataset updates: Never
    This dataset is part of the data series [?]: UNHCR - Jordan Home Visits Survey
    It is increasingly recognised that the majority of the world's refugees reside not in camps, but dispersed amongst the community in the countries where they have sought asylum. This is the case for Syrian refugees in Jordan, of which 84% live outside official refugee camps in urban and rural areas across the country. Understanding the needs, vulnerabilities and capacities of this dispersed refugee population is vital to ensuring their protection and access to services. The purpose of this dataset is to examine the situation of Syrian refugees living outside camps in Jordan, based on data collected through UNHCR's Home Visits programme. Under this programme, interviews are conducted with every refugee household registering with UNHCR outside camps. This provides an unparalleled source of information about the situation of Syrian refugees in non-camp settings.