Internally displaced persons in protracted displacement may not receive optimal social work services. Governments must refrain from implicitly ‘ending’ displacement and uphold social care policies that really work for the displaced. By doing so, social work services become more sensitive and life-changing among people displaced for longer periods of time.
AymerichOZeynelogluS (2018) House damage revisited: How type of damage and perpetrating actor affect intentions and actions of IDPs in Iraq. International Migration57(2): 65–79.
2.
ColladoZC (2023) Stepping-up social work services among families displaced by war. International Social Work. Epub ahead of print 30 June. DOI: 10.1177/00208728231184606.
Di MarcantonioFCustodioEAbukarY (2020) Child dietary diversity and associated factors among children in Somalian IDP Camps. Food and Nutrition Bulletin41(1): 61–76.
5.
FarrajWYousafzaiSAl-DajaniH, et al. (2021) Acknowledging alternative perceptions of success among internally displaced female entrepreneurs: An intersectional perspective. SSRN Electronic Journal. Available at: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3867985
6.
JacobsCKyamusugulwaPMKubihaSL, et al. (2022) Is translocality a hidden solution to overcome protracted displacement in the DR Congo?Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies48: 4313–4327. Available at: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369183X.2022.2090154
7.
KochE (2015) Protracted displacement in Georgia: Structural vulnerability and ‘existing not living’. Human Organization74(2): 135–143. Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/44127082
MooneyE (2002) An IDP no more? Exploring the issue of when displacement ends. In: Discussion paper for the brainstorming session on ‘When Internal Displacement Ends’. Brookings-CUNY Project on Internal Displacement and Institute for the Study of Forced Migration, Georgetown University, Washington DC, 22April.