Crynodeb
This paper focuses on understanding how displaced people perceive dignity. In doing so, empirical evidence from the displaced Rohingyas from Myanmar now living in Bangladesh and internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Afghanistan are contrasted with how dignity is being conceptualised in existing social science literature. Rohingyas in Bangladesh and IDPs in Afghanistan represent two of the largest groups of displaced people in the current world. The sheer volume of these groups along with their needs for support, coordination of humanitarian activities and regional/global politics clearly manifest that they pose one of the critical development challenges of the current time. We have observed these groups in their present living conditions, heard their stories and seen how different social and political actors can treat them as a 'burden'. We argue that, for effective and sustainable resolutions for these vulnerable groups, it is important for academic researchers as well as policy practitioners to discern what they perceive as dignity and a dignified solution for the crisis they are now living in.
Iaith wreiddiol | Saesneg |
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Statws | Cyhoeddwyd - 19 Meh 2020 |
Digwyddiad | Development Studies Association Conference 2020: New Leadership for Global Challenges - Virtual Hyd: 16 Meh 2020 → 19 Meh 2020 |
Cynhadledd
Cynhadledd | Development Studies Association Conference 2020 |
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Teitl cryno | DSA2020 |
Cyfnod | 16/06/20 → 19/06/20 |