How human-centered design can help create self-sustainable refugee communities
By UNHCR Innovation, May 3, 2016
If war had not come to Johnny D.’s Angolan village, maybe he would still be selling books with his [...]
Read moreIf war had not come to Johnny D.’s Angolan village, maybe he would still be selling books with his [...]
Read moreDownload the first issue of Innovation Quarterly to read about how UNHCR is incorporating innovation into its response and other [...]
Read moreUsing CwC as a tool when fast-paced transit turns to frustration and uncertainty In January 2016, the Emergency Lab posted a [...]
Read moreThe Emergency Lab’s First Words: Translation Cards During our first scoping mission to fYR Macedonia late last year, the [...]
Read moreWe sat on a bench under the sun conversing amidst sounds of young boys playing soccer and kids running to [...]
Read moreTimothy Sakala saw a problem, and he saw a solution. It was the middle he wasn’t so sure about. [...]
Read moreWhat is the Emergency Lab? Some of the greatest opportunities can also be quite daunting, can’t they? This is [...]
Read moreOn his days off, Abdiwali Mohamed can usually be found on a football field, either juggling a ball or organizing [...]
Read moreWant to learn more about bottom-up innovation? Take a look at the Humanitarian Innovation Jam 2016 on Bottom-up Innovation. Local Challenges. [...]
Read moreThe long, winding road of our Innovation Fellowship led us to Cape Town and the AfricaCom conference, the largest meeting [...]
Read more