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the refugee crisis

who are refugees?

  • refugee: a person who is unable to return to their home country because of a well-founded fear of persecution and/or death due to race, membership in a particular social group, political opinion, religion, or national origin

the numbers

  • there are 82,400,000 people displaced from their homes worldwide

  • 2,900,000 were displaced from their homes in 2020

  • 26,400,000 displaced people are under the age of 18

    • children make up 30% of the world’s population but 42% of the forcibly displaced population

  • 37,000 are forced to flee every day

  • 57% come from Syria, Yemen, Afghanistan, and South Sudan

    • the world’s 6 biggest refugee crises are currently in Syria, Venezuela, Afghanistan, South Sudan, Myanmar (1.1m), and Somalia (900,000)

  • 80% of refugees live in countries bordering their own

common stereotypes of refugees

  • poor

  • uneducated

  • don’t speak “our” language

  • unemployed

  • homeless

  • scary

  • violent

  • freeloaders

geographic patterns

emigration from

  • South America

  • Africa

immigration to

  • North America

  • Europe

key terms

emigrants (emigration = migration from a location**)**

  • refugee: a person who is unable to return to their home country because of a well-founded fear of persecution and/or death due to race, membership in a particular social group, political opinion, religion, or national origin

  • internally displaced person: someone who has been forced to migrate for similar political reasons as a refugee but has not migrated across an international border

  • types of migration

    • voluntary migration: a movement made by choice

    • forced migration: a type of movement in which people do not choose to relocate, but do so under threat of violence

tracking immigration patterns

  • net migration: the difference between the number of immigrants and emigrants to and from a region

  • interregional migration: a permanent move from one region of a country to another

  • intraregional migration: a permanent movement within one region of a country

  • chain migration: the idea that people move to communities where relatives or friends have previously migrated

“push” factors

  • persecution: the mistreatment or punishment of a group of people because of their identities or beliefs

  • genocide: a type of persecution; an attempt to kill an entire population based on a shared identity or belief

“pull” factors

  • sanctuary: a coveted location of protection for refugees; often a stop or endpoint on their journeys

  • protection of human rights

    • human rights: rights inherent to all human beings, whatever our nationality, place of residence, sex, national or ethnic origin, color, religion, language, or any other status

opportunities for aid

  • humanitarian: a person who seeks to promote human welfare; a philanthropist

  • Red Cross: the largest humanitarian organization, coordinating aid efforts after human and natural disasters around the world

R

the refugee crisis

who are refugees?

  • refugee: a person who is unable to return to their home country because of a well-founded fear of persecution and/or death due to race, membership in a particular social group, political opinion, religion, or national origin

the numbers

  • there are 82,400,000 people displaced from their homes worldwide

  • 2,900,000 were displaced from their homes in 2020

  • 26,400,000 displaced people are under the age of 18

    • children make up 30% of the world’s population but 42% of the forcibly displaced population

  • 37,000 are forced to flee every day

  • 57% come from Syria, Yemen, Afghanistan, and South Sudan

    • the world’s 6 biggest refugee crises are currently in Syria, Venezuela, Afghanistan, South Sudan, Myanmar (1.1m), and Somalia (900,000)

  • 80% of refugees live in countries bordering their own

common stereotypes of refugees

  • poor

  • uneducated

  • don’t speak “our” language

  • unemployed

  • homeless

  • scary

  • violent

  • freeloaders

geographic patterns

emigration from

  • South America

  • Africa

immigration to

  • North America

  • Europe

key terms

emigrants (emigration = migration from a location**)**

  • refugee: a person who is unable to return to their home country because of a well-founded fear of persecution and/or death due to race, membership in a particular social group, political opinion, religion, or national origin

  • internally displaced person: someone who has been forced to migrate for similar political reasons as a refugee but has not migrated across an international border

  • types of migration

    • voluntary migration: a movement made by choice

    • forced migration: a type of movement in which people do not choose to relocate, but do so under threat of violence

tracking immigration patterns

  • net migration: the difference between the number of immigrants and emigrants to and from a region

  • interregional migration: a permanent move from one region of a country to another

  • intraregional migration: a permanent movement within one region of a country

  • chain migration: the idea that people move to communities where relatives or friends have previously migrated

“push” factors

  • persecution: the mistreatment or punishment of a group of people because of their identities or beliefs

  • genocide: a type of persecution; an attempt to kill an entire population based on a shared identity or belief

“pull” factors

  • sanctuary: a coveted location of protection for refugees; often a stop or endpoint on their journeys

  • protection of human rights

    • human rights: rights inherent to all human beings, whatever our nationality, place of residence, sex, national or ethnic origin, color, religion, language, or any other status

opportunities for aid

  • humanitarian: a person who seeks to promote human welfare; a philanthropist

  • Red Cross: the largest humanitarian organization, coordinating aid efforts after human and natural disasters around the world