Cash-Based Interventions
When people are forced to flee their homes, they leave with the bare essentials. They also lose their ability to earn and spend in the process. Our cash-based interventions (CBIs) seek to protect refugees by reducing the risks they face and to maintain their capacity to spend. CBIs can be used in a variety of settings, as long as there is a stable market and a safe way to provide refugees with cash or vouchers. The flexibility that CBIs offer makes them a more dignified form of assistance, giving refugees the ability to immediately prioritise and choose what they need.
Cash-based interventions make the displaced less likely to resort to harmful coping strategies, such as survival sex, child labour, family separation and forced marriage. They also directly benefit the local economy and can contribute to peaceful coexistence with host communities.
At UNHCR, we strive to make the best use of the latest available technologies, such as cash delivery through ATMs, iris scans and the EyeCloud in Jordan. We are also building ever-growing partnerships within the humanitarian community and the private sector.
Useful links
- UNHCR Fact Sheet on Cash-Based Assistance 2018
- UNHCR Strategy for the Institutionalisation of Cash-Based Interventions 2016-2020
- Policy on Cash-Based Interventions
- Cash and Protection
- Multipurpose Cash Grants (MPGs)
- UNHCR Operational Guidelines for Cash-Based Interventions in Displacement Settings
- Video: Multipurpose Cash Grants
- Report: Braving The Cold: Winter cash assistance making a difference to urban refugees in Jordan
- Summary of the CaLP/UNHCR Review of the Common Cash Facility in Jordan
- Cash addendum to UNHCR - WFP MoU
- UNHCR Multi-Sector Market Assessment - Nigeria, October 2017
- A promise of tomorrow: the effects of UNHCR and UNICEF cash assistance on Syrian refugees in Jordan
- Evaluation of UNHCR's cash based interventions in Jordan
- Multi-Purpose Cash and Sectoral Outcomes. A Review of Evidence and Learning: Full report | Executive summary | case study Greece | case study Afghanistan
Tools and resources
- UNHCR-WFP Lessons Learned - Mitigating Risks of Abuse of Power in Cash Assistance in DRC
- UNHCR-WFP Mitigating Risks of Abuse of Power in Cash Assistance
- Cash for Shelter in Kenya: A Field Experience
- Cash for Education: Direction and Key Considerations
- Cash Assistance and Gender - Key Considerations and Learning
- Cash Feasibility and Response Analysis Toolkit
- Cash Based Interventions for WASH Programmes in Refugee Settings
- Cash for Health: Key learnings from a cash for health intervention in Jordan
- Cash Delivery Mechanism Assessment Tool
- Basic Needs Approach in the Refugee Response
- Multi-sector Market Assessment: Companion Guide and Toolkit
- Multi-sector Market Assessment Tools
- Rental Market Assessment Tools
- The Common Cash Facility - Partnering for Better Cash Assistance to Refugees in Jordan
- CaLP/UNHCR – Review of the Common Cash Facility in Jordan
- The Greece Cash Alliance – Meeting Basic Needs through a harmonized Partnership System for Cash Assistance
- Cash for education – A global review of UNHCR programs in refugee situations
- CashAssist - UNHCR's cash assistance management system in Greece
- UNHCR Mapping of Social Safety Nets for Refugees - Opportunities and Challenges
- Cash Assistance in Bangladesh
- Cash for Latrines