2021
DOI: 10.1080/13629395.2021.1922969
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Disaggregating Jordan’s Syrian refugee response: The ‘Many Hands’ of the Jordanian state

Abstract: This is a disaggregated study of different factors which shaped Jordan's Syrian refugee response. It considers the response's internal workings and how hosting a large displaced population from the Mediterranean state of Syria is distributed across different public institutions with the involvement of international actors. The argument is that an agenda intent on securing the status quo influences the response, but that it is not always coherently implemented by the many hands of the Jordanian state. The main … Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…5 In 2015, the onset of the Jordan Response Plan (JRP) by the Jordanian government and the implementation of the Refugee and Resilience Plans, followed by the Jordan Compact in 2016, reoriented, at least on paper, humanitarian efforts from immediate relief, protection, and vulnerability to more developmental concerns (Thompson 2017). This shift has been fueled by Jordan's growing concerns over its capacity to manage a protracted crisis and pressure from the EU to contain migrants in the Middle East (Tsourapas 2019;Ali 2021). As a result, humanitarian funding has largely been allocated to resilience projects though with mixed results on refugees' socio-economic empowerment (Burlin 2020).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…5 In 2015, the onset of the Jordan Response Plan (JRP) by the Jordanian government and the implementation of the Refugee and Resilience Plans, followed by the Jordan Compact in 2016, reoriented, at least on paper, humanitarian efforts from immediate relief, protection, and vulnerability to more developmental concerns (Thompson 2017). This shift has been fueled by Jordan's growing concerns over its capacity to manage a protracted crisis and pressure from the EU to contain migrants in the Middle East (Tsourapas 2019;Ali 2021). As a result, humanitarian funding has largely been allocated to resilience projects though with mixed results on refugees' socio-economic empowerment (Burlin 2020).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If the threat involves committing a crime or attributing dishonourable or defamatory information to the victim, the penalty increases (Al-Hammouri et al, 2023). This is especially true when accompanied by a request (explicit or implicit) to perform or refrain from an action (Ali, 2023). This reflects the understanding that such extortion material can severely damage the victim's reputation and social standing (Alrousan & Faqir, 2023).…”
Section: The Mental Landscapementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 2012, Jordan faced a mass arrival of Syrian refugees, and the Jordanian authorities decided to open camps close to its border with Syria. The decision to open refugee camps was partly related to the fact that Jordanian authorities wanted to give visibility to the Syrian refugee crisis and to attract funding from the international community (Ali 2021). Nevertheless, this camp policy concerned only a limited proportion of the Syrian refugees.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%