Introduction
The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) believes that displaced populations and communities that host them have the right, and the choice, to be part of a connected society, and have access to technology that enables them to build better futures for themselves, their families and the world.
While the realities of providing connectivity in displacement are diverse and contextual, UNHCR works towards:
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Inclusion of displaced populations and hosting communities in strategic investments & frameworks
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Availability of services and affordable access to meaningful internet connectivity
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Provision of a legal pathways for refugees and displaced persons to access connectivity
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Connectivity and the digital can be tools for self-reliance and positive change only when internet access is available to all, affordable, legal and inclusive of displaced and host communities alike.
An innovative approach
UNHCR Innovation Service’s supports the Connectivity for Refugees initiative through a three-pillar approach that focuses on catalysing connectivity innovations and solutions from the field, using research to have a holistic understanding of the intersections of connectivity and displacement, and capturing bright spots through storytelling and strategic communications.
- Field experimentation and support
Inclusion of displaced populations and hosting communities in strategic investments & frameworks - Research
Availability of services and affordable access to meaningful internet connectivity
- Communications
Provision of a legal pathways for refugees and displaced persons to access connectivity
The Digital Leisure Divide
When actively pursuing connectivity and digital inclusion solutions for forcibly displaced persons, UNHCR has often found that leisure and entertainment are some of the most prominent connectivity use cases. However very few assessments have dug into these dimensions of connectivity, rather focussing on more utilitarian connectivity use cases.
Our new research, ¨The Digital Leisure Divide and the Forcibly Displaced¨, produced in partnership with the Erasmus University Rotterdam, seeks to address this and is looking at ways how digital technologies are being used by the forcibly displaced for leisure purposes, covering aspects such as entertainment, gaming, sexuality, content creation, community voice, and livelihoods, among others.
This report acts as initial desk research focusing on the various uses and potential benefits of digital leisure in displacement contexts. These findings are complemented and validated by the learnings gathered during the field research carried out in Boa Vista, Brazil, where communities expressed their preferences and uses of digital technologies for leisure purposes. A subsequent report will be launched covering the field research in Boa Vista more specifically.
The Digital Leisure Divide and the Forcibly Displaced includes possible approaches showcasing how digital leisure can represent a pathway to access the inherent opportunities that digital technologies can offer to forcibly displaced persons.
Download the Digital Leisure Divide and the Forcibly Displaced below
Stories
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Publications
A collection of research, insights, and innovations from the field at the crossroads of displacement and connectivity to learn how UNHCR navigates challenges and how refugees move in a shared digital space.
Practical Resources
Key resources to get started with Connectivity for Refugees, from the practical “how tos” to the technical resources needed to support digital connectivity in displacement.
- Connectivity for Refugees Glossary
A glossary to navigate the universe of connectivity with definitions and information in simple and jargon-free language.
View - Connectivity for Refugees Emergency Handbook
Practical toolkit to respond to the immediate connectivity needs of the displaced during crises and humanitarian emergencies (Available in French, Spanish, and Arabic).
View - How to work with Mobile Network Operators
Practical resources designed to support UNHCR operations engage with Mobile Network Operators in a systematic way
View - Mobile Money: Essential Considerations for Humanitarian Practitioners
Practical toolkit for humanitarian organisations that can help advise on the use of mobile money solutions for cash transfers.
View
FAQs
Connectivity for Refugees: What we do, how we do it, and why we do it. All your questions answered here.
What is Connectivity for Refugees?
What does connectivity mean?
How was the Connectivity for Refugees initiative born?
How can refugees and affected persons be part of this initiative?
Why is the Innovation Service working on connectivity?
Who is paying for it?
What is the Innovation Service’s role?
Why is connectivity important?
How can we collaborate/ engage /know more? How can I share an exciting/promising practice?
Why is UNHCR working on connectivity? Aren’t there other organizations and companies that do that?
Are you only focusing on refugees?
Who are you looking to collaborate with?
Contact
Are you working in digital connectivity and displacement and you have interesting perspectives to share? Do you have questions or want to support Connectivity for Refugees’ work?
Get in touch at [email protected]