Data and Analysis

Making decisions based on evidence is key to building and monitoring progress towards resilience and self-reliance of host and refugee communities and targeting aid resources in an optimal manner. 

The UNHCR-World Bank Joint Data Center on Forced Displacement aims to enhance the ability of stakeholders to make timely and evidence-informed decisions that can improve the lives of affected people. It aims to:

  • Ensure population and socioeconomic data are systematically collected and analyzed;
  • Facilitate open access to forced displacement data, while ensuring the integrity of the legal protection framework;
  • Promote innovations to enhance forced displacement data through satellite imagery, cell phones, and other new technologies;
  • Strengthen the global data collection system, establishing common norms, definitions, and methodologies, and support efforts to fortify country systems where necessary.

Improving the availability of comparable microdata on multi-dimensional poverty (or simply socioeconomic data) on forcibly displaced persons and refugees is a key area UNHCR is investing in its partnership with the World Bank.

Major initiatives in this area include:

  • The inclusion of forcibly displaced persons in national surveys that measure poverty. The World Bank and national governments have expanded the collection of poverty data to include refugees in three countries (Uganda, Chad and Niger). Discussions are ongoing to provide support in this area to more countries in 2020 and beyond. 
  • Conducting reduced versions of national surveys as part of UNHCR proGres verification exercises. Already implemented in two countries (Burundi and Kenya), discussions are ongoing to include more countries in 2020 and beyond.
  • Enhancing capacity of UNHCR registries to collect more meaningful socioeconomic data. This ensures that corporate refugee data systems, primarily PRIMES and proGres, are capable of directly generating analytical insights that are useful to decision makers.

Monitoring Livelihoods Programmes

We track the impact and the cost effectiveness of both UNHCR and our partners’ livelihoods programmes through a comprehensive monitoring framework. The framework uses a set of clearly defined impact and performance indicators to both guide the design and monitor programmes. Supporting the monitoring framework is a mobile survey tool that UNHCR field operations have been using to collect beneficiary data since 2017.

The impact of livelihoods interventions is presented through an open data platform, the UNHCR Integrated Refugee and Forcibly Displaced Livelihoods Information System, which presents performance and impact indicators in a standardized, systematic way that allows for comparison across countries and regions. Such results can be further disaggregated to view impact by age, gender, legal status, location and implementing partners. The platform displays results in real time, including anonymized household datasets for download, enabling timely adjustments to programmes.

Supporting the global rollout of the Livelihoods Information System, since 2018, UNHCR has partnered with the non-governmental organization CartONG, who provides training and other technical support to all global teams.

Further resources: 

Research and Policy Briefs

Reports and Surveys on the Socioeconomic Impact of COVID-19 on Forcibly Displaced Populations

LebanonMicrodata
Nigeria – Microdata
Kenya – MicrodataBlog post
Ethiopia – Microdata – Refugee sampling design
Uganda (Overview, Round 12, and 3) –  Blog post
Costa Rica (in Spanish) – Blog post (in Spanish) –Infographic – Microdata
Mexico (in Spanish) – Blog post (in Spanish) –Infographic – Microdata
Impact on adolescents in Bangladesh Cox's Bazar – Microdata – Blog post 

The impact of financial assistance through volunteer programmes in Cox's Bazar refugee camps
Research Brief

Age- and gender-based health risks facing adolescents within Rohingya refugee and Bangladeshi host communities
Policy briefs on health, nutrition, and SRH

Psychosocial well-being among Rohingya and Bangladeshi adolescents in Cox's Bazar
Policy brief (UNHCR provided comments)

Exploring the educational barriers facing adolescents in Cox's Bazar
Policy brief (UNHCR provided comments)

Exploring the capabilities of Bangladeshi and Rohingya adolescents in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh (includes analysis on bodily integrity and freedom from violence)

Policy brief (UNHCR provided comments)

The CBPS anonymized microdata from the 2019 baseline is catalogued in UNHCR Microdata Library.

Cox's Bazar Panel Survey
A comprehensive, large-sample survey that tracks both host and refugee households over time in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh

Estimating refugee poverty quickly using cross-survey imputation
Research paper – Summary – Blog post 

Reaching the poorest refugees in Niger
Evaluation of food and cash distribution 

Impact of Venezuelan flow on Roraima State in Brazil
Implications for Public Policy

Integration of Venezuelan Refugees and Migrants in Brazil
Research paper - Blog post - Socioeconomic indicators dashboard (in Portuguese)

Improving employment outcomes in Uganda
Summary - Policy brief - Knowledge brief

Supporting the most vulnerable groups in Uganda
Targeting assistance programmes to persons with specific needs and vulnerabilities

Improving welfare and food security through better land productivity
Overview of access to land and its uses by refugees in the Maratane Camp and host communities in Mozambique

Graduation programme in Mozambique
Design of impact evaluation on employment, welfare and social integration for refugees and host communities - Blog post

Socioeconomic Comparisons of Forcibly Displaced Persons and Hosts

Socio-Economic Evidence in Practice in Forcibly Displaced Settings

Vol 2 June 2022: Examples of uses of socio-economic data in advocacy, policy and programmes 

Vol 1 June 2021: Examples of UNHCR's uses of socioeconomic data to inform evidence-based programming, policy and advocacy  – French

Kenya Analytical Program on Forced Displacement (KAP-FD)
A multi-year undertaking to gather evidence on how refugee and host populations make social and economic decisions and their implications for government, humanitarian, and development policies.

Kalobeyei Settlement in Kenya
Full reportSummaryInfographic – Microdata

Kakuma Camp in Kenya
Full reportSummary Infographic – Microdata

Urban refugees in Kenya
Full report - Summary - Infographic

Comparative analysis of urban and camp-based refugees in Kenya
Full report - Summary - Infographic

Stateless Shona Community in Kenya
Full reportSummaryBlog post – Microdata

Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh
Innovations in gathering host and refugee evidence from the Rohingya crisis in Cox's Bazar