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  • 00:03 [Hana Brixi] Good morning, good afternoon, good evening  
  • 00:07 to everyone joining us today. I'm Hana Brixi,  Global Director for Gender at the World Bank.  
  • 00:14 And I am delighted to welcome you to this  important event to talk about gender dimensions  
  • 00:21 of forced displacement. And this is urgent.  Conflict and climate change are driving forced  
  • 00:29 displacement to unprecedented levels. And today we  are launching new research on gender dimensions of  
  • 00:37 forced displacement. And the research was produced  by the World Bank with the support of the UK’s  
  • 00:43 foreign Commonwealth and Development Office and  in partnership with UNHCR. And we will discuss the  
  • 00:50 new evidence on how the hardships experienced  by forcibly displaced people are compounded  
  • 00:56 by gender inequality, and we will discuss  solutions, including effective partnerships. 
  • 01:04 Now, to start the conversation, it is my honor  to welcome Ms. Mari Pangestu, World Bank Managing  
  • 01:12 Director of Development, Policy and Partnerships,  to share opening remarks. Mari, over to you.
  • 01:18 [Mari Pangestu] 
  • 01:20 Thank you, Hana. Good day to everybody. And thank  you for joining us at this important discussion  
  • 01:27 on the gender dimension of forced displacement.  I'm honored to share the stage with such a robust  
  • 01:32 panel of researchers, practitioners, and leaders  working to address issues of gender inequality  
  • 01:38 across the humanitarian development nexus. This work has never been more relevant. Forced  
  • 01:45 displacement is on the rise, with the population  of refugees, internally displaced persons,  
  • 01:51 and asylum seekers surpassing 82 million at the  end of 2020. While conflict and violence continue  
  • 01:57 to be the leading drivers of forced displacement,  as Hana mentioned, environmental degradation  
  • 02:03 and climate change are also emerging as critical  challenges that force people to flee their homes. 
  • 02:10 In addition, the COVID 19 pandemic impacted the  forcibly displaced, putting them at increased  
  • 02:16 risk for food and economic insecurity, as well as  challenges to access health and social protection  
  • 02:23 services. Research from the Gender  Dimension of Forced Displacement  
  • 02:27 program brings important new knowledge and  exposes numerous ways that forced displacement  
  • 02:33 affects men and women differently in terms of  poverty, livelihoods, and risks of violence. 
  • 02:40 These research findings will be shared today  and have important implications for policy and  
  • 02:45 program design. They also underline the urgent  need for coordinated responses and even stronger  
  • 02:52 partnerships between the organizations that  work across the humanitarian development nexus.  
  • 02:58 The World Bank's recent $93 billion replenishment  of IDA has new commitments to strengthen  
  • 03:04 prevention and responses to gender-based  violence and scale up women's economic  
  • 03:10 inclusion, especially in fragile settings. This builds on the work of IDA19, where  
  • 03:16 $2.2 billion was earmarked for promoting  durable solutions to forced displacement.  
  • 03:22 IDA20 deepens the emphasis on government policy  commitment, resilient and inclusive recovery, and  
  • 03:28 gender equality. It pledges closer partnerships  with UNHCR and national governments in promoting  
  • 03:35 durable solutions among both hosts and refugee  communities. So it's great to have Gillian Triggs  
  • 03:41 from UNHCR here on the panel today. To maximize the impact on the ground,  
  • 03:47 addressing issues of gender inequality and forced  displacement requires close collaboration with  
  • 03:53 many actors: international development  organizations, UN agencies, researchers,  
  • 03:59 NGOs, local leaders, and most importantly,  listening to displaced persons themselves. 
  • 04:06 Several World Bank projects work in partnership  with other institutions to address the unique  
  • 04:12 challenges of humanitarian settings. For  example, through the Emergency Multi-Sector  
  • 04:17 Rohingya Refugee Response Project in Bangladesh,  the World Bank is partnering with UNHCR,  
  • 04:23 local government agencies and NGOs to provide  safe spaces, psychological support, and other  
  • 04:30 resources aimed at preventing and responding to  gender-based violence amongst Rohingya refugees. 
  • 04:37 Now, a decade after the first world development  report on gender equality, the World Bank has  
  • 04:43 launched the Accelerate Equality Initiative to  highlight what has been learned and identify  
  • 04:48 where more focused effort is needed. The barriers,  discrimination, and risk of gender-based violence  
  • 04:54 faced by women and girls in situations of forced  displacement are some of the most egregious…  
  • 05:16 Sorry, let me just repeat that sentence. The  barriers, discrimination, and risk of gender-based  
  • 05:20 violence faced by women and girls in situations of  forced displacement are some of the most egregious  
  • 05:28 globally and there is a clear need to make  the faster progress to achieve better results.  
  • 05:34 Looking forward, this requires going beyond  addressing gender-based vulnerability. 
  • 05:39 Program design should feature a much  stronger focus on sustainably empowering  
  • 05:43 women and girls to contribute to  increased community resilience,  
  • 05:47 to break cycles of conflict, and to contribute to  maintaining the peace and a re-imagined society.  
  • 05:55 Today's panel is the start of a conversation  reflecting on the new findings, sharing examples  
  • 06:01 of how to use this research to increase gender  equality and women's empowerment in settings  
  • 06:06 where there is forced displacement, and how to  work together to further strengthen partnerships  
  • 06:11 and design programs for better impact. So I couldn't think of a better a person to begin  
  • 06:17 today's discussion than David Miliband, President  and CEO of the International Rescue Committee,  
  • 06:23 to present the keynote address. David oversees  the agency's relief and development operations  
  • 06:29 in over 30 countries, and the IRCs advocacy  efforts in Washington and other capitals on  
  • 06:35 behalf of the world's most vulnerable people.  The IRC is a longtime partner of the World Bank  
  • 06:43 with underground collaboration in countries  across the world, like DRC, Bangladesh,  
  • 06:48 and Kenya. We are happy to have him with  us here today. David, the floor is yours.
  • 06:53 [David Miliband] Thank you very much, Mari, for your leadership and  
  • 06:57 for your very warm welcome. You are very generous  in your words. I can think of many other people  
  • 07:05 who I would like to listen to today on this  topic, but I'm very happy and honored even to  
  • 07:12 be able to reflect some of the thinking that I've  been able to learn from in our own organization,  
  • 07:19 the International Rescue Committee, working in  200 field sites in 40 countries around the world,  
  • 07:26 where people are fleeing to save their own  lives, where people whose lives are shattered  
  • 07:32 by conflict, persecution, and disaster. I'm  also very pleased to be able to acknowledge  
  • 07:38 the UNHCR and the UK Foreign Office for their  sponsorship of this vital work. As you said, Mari,  
  • 07:45 the topic being discussed today has never been  more important. Because humanitarian needs,  
  • 07:53 including those of the forcibly displaced,  have grown so remarkably over the last  
  • 07:58 decade. Just to cap it off, the number of  internally displaced has risen from 16 million  
  • 08:04 in 2010 to over 40 million today, while the  number of refugees has doubled to 30 million. 
  • 08:11 But I think there's a second reason why this is a  particularly important discussion now, and that is  
  • 08:18 that they aren't forcibly displaced, we also know  more about their condition and we know more about  
  • 08:26 how to help them. We have more evidence to do  that. I'm very proud that the International  
  • 08:30 Rescue Committee is not just a large humanitarian  operational NGO. We're also the largest impact  
  • 08:38 evaluation agency in the humanitarian sector. And one of the things about which we know much  
  • 08:44 more than we did at a decade ago is the  evidence about the practical experience,  
  • 08:51 the impact of effective investment in women  and girls who face multiple inequalities  
  • 08:58 in situations of forced displacement. At the IRC,  we are seeing firsthand the disproportionate and  
  • 09:06 distinct set of needs facing displaced women,  but also the solutions which go beyond benefiting  
  • 09:13 only our own clients, but also the wider  communities in which they are situated. 
  • 09:18 The research findings that are published today  do present a stark picture. Households led by  
  • 09:24 displaced women are more likely to be poorer than  parallel male-headed households. And displaced  
  • 09:30 women suffer increased effects of intimate partner  violence, magnified many times in situations of  
  • 09:37 armed conflict and also by emergencies like COVID  19. In fragile and conflict settings, women and  
  • 09:44 girls are suffering a double disadvantage because  of where they live and because of their gender. 
  • 09:51 And what's more, national and multi-lateral  responses remain weak and underfunded. And  
  • 09:57 compounding the problem is that the world too  often is looking away. This is part of the system  
  • 10:03 failure that I described in my lecture at the  Council on Foreign Relations in December for the  
  • 10:09 launch of the IRC Emergency Watchlist for 2022.  That watchlist, using over 60 different indicators  
  • 10:18 to compile a list of 20 countries, most subjects  to humanitarian emergency, showed that in those 20  
  • 10:25 countries, 274 million people out of a population  of 800 million were in humanitarian need. 
  • 10:32 And the watchlist reinforces the findings of the  research that's being today to show that women and  
  • 10:38 girls in high-risk countries are hit the hardest.  16 of the 20 countries in our emergency watchlist  
  • 10:47 are featuring in the bottom category of the Gender  Development Index and seven feature among the  
  • 10:55 10 of the least gender equal countries according  to the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace,  
  • 11:01 and Security. In these contexts, women and  girls often face particular barriers toward  
  • 11:06 accessing humanitarian assistance,  legal and safe work, and education. 
  • 11:11 As a result, women and girls represent over  70% of the people facing chronic hunger,  
  • 11:17 while as much as 70% of women and girls in  humanitarian settings face gender-based violence.  
  • 11:23 Afghanistan, to take one example where the  World Bank and the International Rescue  
  • 11:26 Committee have worked together, tops the  watchlist. Before the change in authority in  
  • 11:32 August last year, there were 2.8 million Afghan  refugees. And what is clear today is that women  
  • 11:38 and girls are bearing the brunt of the appalling  economic squeeze that the country is facing. 
  • 11:45 Now, at the International Rescue Committee, we say  that to be a successful humanitarian organization,  
  • 11:52 we also need to be a feminist organization.  By that, we mean that in our work  
  • 11:58 we recognize and address the structural  inequalities that women and girls face  
  • 12:03 centered on their gender. For example, it  means requiring all our programs to conduct  
  • 12:08 a gender analysis in order to have a better  understanding of the prevailing gender norms  
  • 12:13 in the target communities in which  we're working so that we're better  
  • 12:16 able to tackle discriminatory barriers. It means working to give our female clients  
  • 12:23 influence over program design. And we  also recognize that the way we operate  
  • 12:28 internally is the engine to drive forward this  feminist programming, feminist in the sense of  
  • 12:35 understanding and tackling those structural  inequalities, which is why we've trained hundreds  
  • 12:40 of gender equality champions, launched more than  300 women-at-work groups in our own organization  
  • 12:46 to identify gaps in our support for female staff. And it's also why we have our gender action plan,  
  • 12:55 which is not just held accountable as management,  but it's published on our website so that the  
  • 13:00 wider world can see where we have further to  go to meet the aspirations that we have set,  
  • 13:07 the targets that we have set. Having said this,  gender inequality is too rarely comprehensively  
  • 13:14 addressed in mainstream humanitarian programs,  and the intersecting drivers of these inequalities  
  • 13:20 are neglected in target programs such as  those, for example, focused on livelihoods. 
  • 13:25 The research being published today by the World  Bank, and I applaud your openness in doing so,  
  • 13:31 shows why such targeting is necessary. And I do  want to emphasize that I think there is a special  
  • 13:38 role for the World Bank in the multi-lateral  system in this process. Because in our experience  
  • 13:44 as a humanitarian organization, social problems  are best challenged by social and economic  
  • 13:51 interventions, or maybe a better way to put it is  that economic empowerment programs aimed at women  
  • 13:58 help improve the efficacy of the social programs. So the issue of gender inequality, far from being  
  • 14:05 a diversion from the work of the World Bank, is  absolutely core to the success of the World Bank's  
  • 14:12 work. And it's in that context that my colleagues  and I wanted to suggest three recommendations as  
  • 14:20 the Bank embarks on its yearlong Gender  Equality and Development +10 process,  
  • 14:25 its Accelerate Equality initiative.  These recommendations are based on  
  • 14:31 our evidence of what works, but also speak to  the research evidence you're publishing today. 
  • 14:39 First, an inclusive economic recovery from  the effects of the pandemic, which we must  
  • 14:44 never forget remains the central feature of  many people's lives around the world today.  
  • 14:49 And progress for displaced women relies on  an open and above all inclusive economy,  
  • 14:55 expanding rights to work for women, increasing  their access to vital financial services,  
  • 15:00 and making sure that recovery plans include them. The World Bank fortunately measures women's legal  
  • 15:06 economic inclusion through the Women, Business  and the Law Index, and has the opportunity to  
  • 15:11 influence greater gender equality by urging  governments to open economies and expand social  
  • 15:16 safety nets. Similarly, the World Bank's refugee  policy framework is a tool for assessing refugee  
  • 15:22 inclusion. However, to be effective, it must  assess both the existence of refugee inclusive  
  • 15:27 policy, but also the adherence of authorities  to those policies and their implementation. 
  • 15:34 Second, we hope that the Accelerated Quality  initiative offers an opportunity for the Bank  
  • 15:40 to consider the breadth of its partnerships  and the opportunity for feminist partnerships,  
  • 15:44 including with women's rights organizations on  the front line and vital funding for humanitarian  
  • 15:50 responders. The most striking example of  this critical need is in Afghanistan today,  
  • 15:55 where support for female humanitarian  responders is more important than ever,  
  • 16:00 and the needs of women and girls are growing. But the crisis in Afghanistan also illustrates  
  • 16:06 the critical need for any strategy about women  and girls to include women and girls in its  
  • 16:10 development. And we hope that the bank can expand  meaningful consultation with frontline actors and  
  • 16:18 amplify the work of female humanitarians, as  well as displaced women, as it designs the next  
  • 16:24 phase of support to assistance in Afghanistan. Thirdly, the research being launched today,  
  • 16:33 as well as expanded evidence, such as the UK  sponsored second phase of what works to prevent  
  • 16:39 violence against women, and the IRC’s research on  scaling economic opportunities for refugee women,  
  • 16:46 lay the foundations for scaling evidence-based  programs. There are some things that we don't  
  • 16:51 know, but there's a lot that we do know. But  too often, the programs that we do know work  
  • 16:57 don't reach sufficient scale. A comprehensive  understanding of the diverse needs of displaced  
  • 17:02 women in diverse settings relies on data  disaggregated by age, gender, disability,  
  • 17:08 and displacement status. The World Bank, the UN,  and the Joint Data Center on Forced Displacement  
  • 17:14 are well placed to ensure that refugees and IDPs  are included in national and household surveys  
  • 17:22 and that progress on their protection and  wellbeing is properly measured over time,  
  • 17:27 ensuring that no one is left behind. I just want to say one other thing about  
  • 17:32 these programmatic interventions. The opportunity  for organizations like the International Rescue  
  • 17:37 Committee, but also I would modestly submit for  the World Bank as well, is to use a model of  
  • 17:44 intervention that is genuinely in partnership with  local communities. And we've made a commitment  
  • 17:50 to foster not just partnerships with  local NGOs in all the places that  
  • 17:55 we work, but to make sure that half of those  community-based organizations are led by women. 
  • 18:00 And I think that's a good example of how a  gendered approach can run through a range  
  • 18:04 of different interventions. As I said at the  beginning, I'm honored to have the chance to  
  • 18:09 present some of the thinking from my colleagues  today, honored to have a chance to speak,  
  • 18:15 but also to listen to what I think will be a very  important dialogue. It's in all of our interests  
  • 18:20 that the implications of this important  research work are understood far and wide,  
  • 18:25 and we are happy to help in that process.  Thank you very much indeed for listening.
  • 18:29 [Hana Brixi] 
  • 18:32 Thank you very much, David, for your  insightful remarks. And thank you also, Mari,  
  • 18:38 for your opening remarks. You both underlined the  importance of evidence to inform action and also  
  • 18:45 the enormous scale of the challenge of forced  displacement and gender equality. And David,  
  • 18:51 you also highlighted the critical importance  of addressing structural inequalities  
  • 18:58 facing women and girls. And the fact  that addressing gender equality helps  
  • 19:03 make development programs more effective. And  thank you also for sharing your recommendations. 
  • 19:11 Let me now share some highlights from the  Gender Dimensions of Forced Displacement  
  • 19:17 research program, which has been led by my World  Bank colleagues, Diana Arango and Lucia Hanmer,  
  • 19:24 and involved a lot of researchers and experts  globally. The research was designed to address  
  • 19:30 three broad questions. One, how does gender  inequality affect poverty in forcibly displaced  
  • 19:37 populations? Two, how does conflict and  displacement affect gender norms and the  
  • 19:44 prevalence of intimate partner violence for women  and girls? And three, what are the solutions? 
  • 19:51 The work culminated in a series of published  papers and policy notes, including nine detailed  
  • 19:58 country investigations and three multi-country  papers covering 17 countries. And you can access  
  • 20:04 all these resources through a link  that will be posted in the chat box.  
  • 20:09 The research is innovative in that nationally  representative data were used to produce empirical  
  • 20:16 findings, bridging an important knowledge gap. Too often humanitarian and development  
  • 20:22 practitioners have helped to rely on  generalizations or on their own experience  
  • 20:28 to design gender responsive programs. So  this new evidence covers an important gap.  
  • 20:36 The research findings underscored the importance  of understanding the intersection of forced  
  • 20:41 displacement, gender and poverty. Over the  course of displacement, families can be  
  • 20:48 separated and children placed with relatives  as a result of household composition change. 
  • 20:55 For example, over half of displaced people  in Ethiopia, South Sudan, and Sudan live in  
  • 21:03 female-headed households compared to about  a third of those in host communities. In all  
  • 21:11 countries, displacement status is associated with  multi-dimensional poverty at the household level,  
  • 21:18 but gender has important impacts on deprivations  experienced by individuals. For example,  
  • 21:26 in all countries studied, displaced households  are poorer than non-displaced households.  
  • 21:33 Individuals living in female-headed displaced  households in Ethiopia, Northeast Nigeria, Sudan,  
  • 21:40 and South Sudan are more likely than others  to be multi-dimensionally poor. And among the  
  • 21:47 dimensionally poor, girls who have been forcibly  displaced are less likely than boys to complete  
  • 21:56 schools. However, the gender of the household head  is not always a good indicator of poverty risk. 
  • 22:04 In Somalia and Jordan, male-headed households  are poorer than female-headed households.  
  • 22:11 And other indicators need to be examined. The  research finds that gender gaps in caregiving  
  • 22:20 responsibilities and access to economic  opportunities impact poverty. For example,  
  • 22:26 in Somalia, internally displaced households with  female single caregivers are most likely to be  
  • 22:34 poor. Similarly, IDP households with children  are at elevated risk of poverty. But there is  
  • 22:42 no association between household composition  and poverty rates for non-displaced Somalis.  
  • 22:50 In Sudan, internally displaced women worked  more on average than the non-displaced women,  
  • 22:57 but were also more likely to be poor. In Somalia,  for both displaced and non-displaced persons,  
  • 23:06 poverty risk is significantly lower for  households with more income earners of  
  • 23:12 either gender. But for displaced persons, having  more female earners reduces the poverty most. 
  • 23:21 The research sheds a new light at gender-based  violence in forced displacement. So for example,  
  • 23:28 in Colombia and Liberia, women who had been  forcibly displaced faced 40% and 55% greater odds,  
  • 23:37 respectively, of experiencing past-year intimate  partner violence compared to non-displaced women,  
  • 23:45 and the risks of gender-based violence  faced by displaced women can be lifelong.  
  • 23:51 In Nigeria and Mali, intimate partner violence  prevalence rates are significantly higher  
  • 23:59 for women living in households situated near  conflict compared to those living in peaceful  
  • 24:07 areas of the country. Such pervasive gender-based  violence constraints women and girls ability to  
  • 24:15 take up economic opportunities and has negative  consequences for children's educational outcomes  
  • 24:21 and impairs their physical and mental health  as has been documented by the research. 
  • 24:26 So based on the evidence, based on the  research, we argue that using this evidence  
  • 24:32 and including the voices of displaced women is  critical for identifying solutions. The policy  
  • 24:39 responses needed include review and revision of  national laws, and it requires policy to achieve  
  • 24:48 gender equality and enhance economic inclusion  for displaced populations. For displaced people,  
  • 24:57 measures to increase free movement and access  to labor markets and financial services  
  • 25:04 are often as needed as is investment in  inclusive social protection and safe,  
  • 25:11 affordable care services, notably, childcare.  In addressing gender-based violence,  
  • 25:18 a full suite of services is needed by gender-based  violence survivors, especially those who have been  
  • 25:25 forcibly displaced and are experiencing the most  prevalent form of intimate partner violence.  
  • 25:33 And additional services are also needed  to prevent violence before it begins. 
  • 25:40 I'm very much looking forward to our conversation  today about the lessons and implications of this  
  • 25:46 work. And with that, I would like to turn to our  distinguished panel. We are joined today by four  
  • 25:56 distinguished panelists with unique experience  and perspective. We have Gillian Triggs,  
  • 26:03 UN Assistant Secretary-General and Assistant  High Commission for Protection with UNHCR;  
  • 26:11 Cecilia Jimenez-Damary, Special Rapporteur on  the human rights of internally displaced persons;  
  • 26:18 Saroj Kumar Jha, World Bank Regional Director  in the Middle East and North Africa region;  
  • 26:26 and Paula Gaviria Betancur, member of  the United Nations Secretary-Generals  
  • 26:32 High-Level Panel on Internal Displacement. So I will now turn to Gillian. Gillian,  
  • 26:40 the World Bank and UNHCR are working together, and  I would say closer and closer together every day.  
  • 26:48 So how do you think this has influenced UNHCR  programs on the ground? And how can we further  
  • 26:57 enhance our collaboration toward achieving SDG  5 on gender quality and women's empowerment,  
  • 27:04 especially among those who have been  forcibly displaced? So over to you, Gillian.
  • 27:09 [Gillian Triggs] Well, thank you very much,  
  • 27:12 Hana. And thank you for going through some of the  research findings, which are sometimes surprising,  
  • 27:17 but extremely useful in informing all our work.  And thank you, David, for our outlining the work  
  • 27:23 of the International Rescue Committee and  particularly taking a feminist approach.  
  • 27:26 I think that's wonderful. But thank you, too, to  Mari, in mentioning the joint work that we do at  
  • 27:33 Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh for the Rohingya. And I  can personally attest having recently been there,  
  • 27:39 what a wonderful space it is that's been  funded through you for women and girls.  
  • 27:46 In the chaos of parts of Cox's Bax, one enters  this quite beautiful space for women and girls  
  • 27:53 where they can get counseling, advice, and really  just a peaceful place. So thank you very much. 
  • 28:00 Well, Hana, your first question then is, how do  you think the work with the World Bank and the  
  • 28:06 partnership with UNH R has transformed the way  that we are working on the ground? So the first  
  • 28:12 part then of your question and a direct answer is  that this working relationship over the last two  
  • 28:19 to three years has really been transformative  of our protection work in many countries.  
  • 28:26 UNHCR provides the factual analysis of refugee  needs to the World Bank through the 2019 and  
  • 28:35 2020 IDA host communities and refugee windows. And  that they in turn enable the Bank to make grants  
  • 28:43 and loans to many of the poorest countries in  the world with very large displaced populations. 
  • 28:49 And it's in that way that UNHCR has been able  to work with the Bank to meet the needs of  
  • 28:54 these displaced peoples in those particular  countries and to prioritize the protection of  
  • 29:00 displaced women's and girls. Importantly also, the  World Bank helps us to address gender inequality  
  • 29:06 with sound, qualitative and quantitative  evidence. And of course, in practical reality,  
  • 29:13 our donors and partners need evidence if  we're to gain their support year after year. 
  • 29:19 Well, gender inequality is both a root cause  of forced displacement for women and girls  
  • 29:24 in many conflicts, but also a consequence of that  displacement. At UNHCR, we know from our 530 or so  
  • 29:33 field operations that, as Mari's pointed out,  82 million people are displaced globally,  
  • 29:40 either in their own country or across frontiers.  We know from our daily interaction with these  
  • 29:47 displaced people that women and girls living in  humanitarian crisis and armed conflicts are at  
  • 29:53 significantly heightened risks, exposing them, as  has been pointed out, to gender based violence,  
  • 29:59 sexual exploitation and abuse, to child marriages  and pregnancies, even to trafficking and forced  
  • 30:05 labor. But at UNHCR, we don't always have  the accurate data and research analysis  
  • 30:10 that can ensure that our policies and programs  are right for specific contexts. And I'll give  
  • 30:16 you an example, if I may. I was recently, or a  few months ago, in Cabo Delgado in Mozambique.  
  • 30:24 And as you will all know, something in the region  of 750,000 people are now internally displaced,  
  • 30:30 burned out of their villages and killed, leading  to mass flights of families to safer areas. The  
  • 30:37 situation is very complex. The region is poor,  but paradoxically, it has oil and gas resources  
  • 30:43 that represent huge development potentials,  along with tourism. The Muslim community  
  • 30:48 suffer discrimination in the region. Security  concerns dominate government policy and the  
  • 30:54 country is subject to unprecedented cyclones  and flooding, further evidence of the impact of  
  • 31:00 climate change on displacement. Well, I visited,  during my visit, a displacement settlement,  
  • 31:06 where grandmothers are nursing the babies of  their children, people who have been killed  
  • 31:11 in the conflict. They're unable to find milk or  healthcare. They're struggling to survive in tents  
  • 31:18 and they're subject to sexual assault at  night in the absence of street lighting.  
  • 31:23 But each conflict has its own characteristics  in leading to displacement, and that is why  
  • 31:29 we value the research into the gender  dimensions of forced displacement which  
  • 31:33 has been developed through this World  Bank group with UK Aid and with UNHCR. 
  • 31:40 We hope that the emerging results will guide the  bank's new gender strategy in forced displacement  
  • 31:47 and provide that critical evidence base for  the World Bank's 2023 World Development Report,  
  • 31:53 that we are really pleased at UNHCR to say  will have a focus on migrants and refugees.  
  • 31:58 The report will of course also inform the  humanitarian development peace programming  
  • 32:04 in the future and help us to encourage our donors  and partners to integrate the protection of women  
  • 32:09 and children into their programs. The aim being,  of course, as the secretary generalist has said,  
  • 32:14 no one should be left behind. You've been through some of the results  
  • 32:18 of the global dimensions of forced displacement  work, and I won't repeat them, other than to say  
  • 32:24 that the violence levels against women who are  displaced is rising globally at an alarming rate.  
  • 32:30 And of course, that explains in part why  40% of those people displaced across borders  
  • 32:37 in 2020 is about half. Displaced women are 24%  more likely to be generally disadvantaged by  
  • 32:45 host communities. And one in five displaced  women will have experienced sexual violence  
  • 32:50 and are victims of gender-based violence while  they're on their journeys across parts of their  
  • 32:55 own country or internationally, the effects of  which will last a lifetime. The results are deeply  
  • 33:01 troubling and Hana has explained them. I think  we need to read them very carefully, but we also  
  • 33:08 need to understand the interaction between gender  and displacement with the gender gaps in education  
  • 33:15 and other elements that are demonstrated by  this research, access to paid work and poverty,  
  • 33:20 with some surprising results, actually. And some  that one wouldn't have imagined. So I think that  
  • 33:24 these will be very important to inform what we do. But the second part of your question,  
  • 33:30 if I remember correctly, is that, how is it that  the UNHCR can collaborate more effectively with  
  • 33:36 the World Bank on this critical question  of responding to gender based violence,  
  • 33:42 understanding, of course, that it's rooted in  historical and cultural power imbalances? Well,  
  • 33:48 first of all, UNHCR currently ensures that  gender equality is central to all our work.  
  • 33:54 But we would like to suggest in our work with  the World Bank that the research be extended to  
  • 34:00 locations where the Bank and other development  partners are expanding their work. For example,  
  • 34:06 under the IDA19, 20 windows, 14 countries are  currently eligible for financing, and it will  
  • 34:13 be valuable to develop further research on  refugee women and girls in these countries,  
  • 34:18 and to link the Bank's data with our policy  and programming more directly so we would have  
  • 34:24 a very, very practical and immediate response. Well, I'll close, if I may, in just mentioning the  
  • 34:31 load staff for our work now, which is the global  compact on refugees. And as you will know, this  
  • 34:36 calls for strengthened corporation with women-led  refugee organizations. And David has mentioned  
  • 34:43 this. It's absolutely crucial that we work at the  local level and that we do prioritize the work of  
  • 34:50 women-led refugee or displaced persons groups. And  by that we really mean meaningful engagement, not  
  • 34:58 just adding them to a panel or seeking a bit of  consultation, but actually engaging them much more  
  • 35:04 directly in decision making and programming and  developing policy. And I think that's something  
  • 35:09 we need to work on. That voice, the voice of women  of experience in displacement is absolutely vital. 
  • 35:18 And I'm very much, of course, encouraged by  all of the observations of the World Bank  
  • 35:24 and including David's comments on the  importance of ensuring that in this  
  • 35:28 period as we come out of COVID that women  have access to financial opportunities  
  • 35:35 that they integrated in the economy, because I  too believe that economic opportunity for women  
  • 35:42 will help to take them or deal  with the gender inequality. 
  • 35:46 So in summary, we hope to increase our work with  the World Bank to provide country-specific facts  
  • 35:52 and analysis, to increase the funding programs  that will in turn promote gender equality and  
  • 35:59 address one of the primary root causes of forced  displacement. So thank you very much, Hana.
  • 36:04 [Hana Brixi] Thank you so much, Gillian. Thank you  
  • 36:07 so much for providing such a powerful illustration  on how gender equality is central to UNHCR work,  
  • 36:15 and also how it is central to the partnership  between UNHCR and the World Bank, and providing  
  • 36:21 the examples on the important complementarity  of global research with local evidence  
  • 36:27 and also the emphasis that is  needed to increase women's voice  
  • 36:32 and leadership to make development programs  more effective. Let me now turn to Cecilia. 
  • 36:39 Cecilia, you are representing the interests of the  millions of displaced persons globally. So can you  
  • 36:47 tell us what have you seen or what can you observe  about lives of women and girls who have been  
  • 36:54 forcibly displaced, and especially considering  also the long-term consequences of displacement?  
  • 37:02 And what programmatic response would the  international community be prioritizing  
  • 37:09 for these women and girls based on the  new evidence. Over to you, Cecilia.
  • 37:12 [Cecilia Jimenez Damary] Thank you very much, Hana, for the question.  
  • 37:19 And I would like to thank you for the invitation  for me to join this distinguished panel.  
  • 37:26 And I'm really very pleased with the study that  you have produced based on concrete case studies,  
  • 37:34 as well as very sound analysis. So I think  that your research will go a long way  
  • 37:40 in terms not only for the analysis, but actually  to the question that you have asked me, knowing  
  • 37:49 what the situation of women and girls in forced  displacement, which your report amply describes,  
  • 37:56 but also how we can programmatically address that. And indeed, displaced women and girls bear the  
  • 38:04 brunt of the risk of non-access to many  human rights: education, livelihood,  
  • 38:11 housing land and property, even documentation,  as well as a very important and this despairing  
  • 38:18 increase of gender-based violence and intimate  partner violence, which are actually recorded  
  • 38:25 in your report, particularly in conflict settings.  Now, this is very, very worrying. But in order to  
  • 38:33 answer your questions on how to  programmatically respond to this,  
  • 38:37 I would like to actually reply in two areas. The first area is a general area of the  
  • 38:45 programmatic approach. And I would personally,  I would professionally actually even bear to  
  • 38:52 emphasize that the impoverishment risk and  reconstruction approach can help to position  
  • 38:59 displacement as a development issue, particularly  with human rights protection implications  
  • 39:08 directly for women and girls. We all know that the  impoverishment risk and reconstruction approach,  
  • 39:17 it underscores internal displacement as increasing  the risk of poverty in various ways. It identifies  
  • 39:25 particular development processes and challenges  required to reverse and respond to such risk,  
  • 39:32 particularly as related to gender. For example,  more women have the risk of landlessness.  
  • 39:41 It's important to analyze, to identify this risk  and to what level and what the conditions are,  
  • 39:47 particularly in order that the appropriate  response such as property restitution  
  • 39:55 and as well as provision of land access  in an appropriate way is actually  
  • 40:02 enhanced and facilitated towards women. You've also asked about livelihood support.  
  • 40:10 We all know that women have an increased risk  of unemployment or non-access to livelihood,  
  • 40:17 again, which are human rights. And the way that  we need to refer to this programmatically is to  
  • 40:26 ensure that there is really a motivation of the  community to set up conditions that will actually  
  • 40:34 enable those livelihood conditions to be set up. I just recently went to a country in the Sahel,  
  • 40:42 and when I spoke to the IDP women, we had an  amazing focus discussion group with the women  
  • 40:49 of a particular camp in the Sahel country,  which is unfortunately in the throes of  
  • 40:58 non-state armed group attacks. And what  they were telling us was, "We want to break  
  • 41:03 from the dependence that top life has given us and  we want to set up our own businesses and we want  
  • 41:11 to have our economic individual and family  independence or collaboration back." 
  • 41:19 Now, the approach of an impoverishment risk  and reconstruction approach, in my view,  
  • 41:25 underscores the need for us, humanitarians and  human rights people and developing partners,  
  • 41:33 to move beyond the debates of early recovery.  We have to re-conceptualize, in my view,  
  • 41:40 displacement as a process that heightens the risk  of such impoverishment and exposure particularly  
  • 41:49 to these human rights violations. Therefore,  this approach to programming also contributes to  
  • 42:00 prevention of conditions that force or oblige  people to flee their homes. And prevention is  
  • 42:06 really an important element in this conversation.  Because the increase in the gravity and intensity  
  • 42:15 of forcible displacement, majority of whom are  women and girls, have to be mitigated. From  
  • 42:25 this perspective, the entry point for analysis  and programmatic response is the identification  
  • 42:33 of the gender-relevant risks and rights  followed by systematic efforts to address them  
  • 42:41 using the mandates of particular ministries of  government, agencies and, as well, civil society.
  • 42:52 [Hana Brixi] Thank you so much, Cecilia, especially  
  • 42:54 for highlighting displacement as a key development  issue and as a human right issue, and also the  
  • 43:01 emphasis that is needed on prevention. And in  fact, it would be an important area for further  
  • 43:07 research to explore how gender equality and  women's leadership can contribute to prevention  
  • 43:16 of conflict violence and forced displacement. Now, let me turn to Saroj. Saroj, As the  
  • 43:23 World Bank Regional Director for Iraq, Iran,  Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria, how have you seen  
  • 43:30 the differentiated impacts of displacement  on men and women? Plus, now it is the 11th  
  • 43:37 year of the Syrian refugee crisis, which remains  the largest refugee crisis in the world. So how  
  • 43:44 are governments and other partners in the region  responding to the gender dimension of this crisis?
  • 43:51 [Saroj Kumar Jha] Thank you very much, Hana.  
  • 43:55 I will make five points. But before that, I have  to share with you something, since you asked me,  
  • 44:01 how have I seen this. So we are in the 11th  year of this crisis. My own reflection is  
  • 44:10 that it's very hard and painful to be a refugee.  It is even harder to be a refugee woman or girl.  
  • 44:20 And this dimension of the vulnerability  of a woman and girl being a refugee  
  • 44:27 is the most critical vulnerability that  we would need to understand better. 
  • 44:32 And that's why I welcome this research,  because it provides us lot more granularity  
  • 44:37 in terms of how we, as a developing institution,  the World Bank, can put this aspect at the core  
  • 44:45 of our developing response to forcibly  displaced. So let me make five points,  
  • 44:49 which is important to move the discussion  forward. First, the nature of displacement.  
  • 44:57 How I see this is that the hosting  countries, as well as many partners,  
  • 45:02 still tend to believe that the displacements  are short term and people will return. 
  • 45:08 The reality is that most displacements tend  to be protracted globally. And this region,  
  • 45:14 where you have more than 12 million displaced  population in this region that I work,  
  • 45:20 you are in the 11th year of the crisis, there  are other displacements, which have been there  
  • 45:24 for a much longer period. All this to say that  our approach to dealing with the displacement,  
  • 45:30 particularly for women and girls, have taken  a much more longer horizon in terms of our  
  • 45:36 understanding of their vulnerabilities,  our financing, our policy dialogue.  
  • 45:42 And this applies to both the  humanitarian and the development actors. 
  • 45:46 It is very important to put that in perspective.  We haven't seen that happen yet. It's getting  
  • 45:51 better. But I think more understanding,  more research on this is going to be very  
  • 45:56 helpful. The second is the world in which we  live today; we are unfortunately witnessing  
  • 46:03 multiple crisis impacting us at the same time.  We have conflict. We have frozen conflicts,  
  • 46:10 active conflicts. We have climate disaster  related conflicts, all happening at the same time.  
  • 46:16 And especially at a time when countries are facing  very serious fiscal stress and their inability to  
  • 46:25 really mobilize more public investments to be  able to create jobs. So as a result, you have  
  • 46:30 increased poverty, increased unemployment, on top  of the various drivers that I mentioned before.  
  • 46:38 And I don't think we understand enough  where there's push and pull factors when  
  • 46:41 multiple crisis impact people at the  same time, especially women and girls. 
  • 46:46 And how do you really understand it  better and factor that in your response,  
  • 46:51 more importantly, to build resilience in  your programs before these crises impact  
  • 46:58 the population? So better understanding of the  push and pull factors I think would be important.  
  • 47:03 And how do we decouple one crisis from another  to really understand the vulnerability and how to  
  • 47:09 reduce these vulnerabilities for women and girls. My third point is about the hosting countries.  
  • 47:15 Most situation that I have seen here now,  these hosting countries, particularly Jordan,  
  • 47:20 Lebanon and Iraq, they have had several issues  with their business environment, with their  
  • 47:26 fiscal policies, with their many sectors in  which there is a need for comprehensive reform.  
  • 47:33 So there are very serious preexisting  constraints in these economies. 
  • 47:38 And when they started hosting  millions of refugees from Syria,  
  • 47:44 this has indeed added a burden on them in terms of  the capacity of the public institutions to provide  
  • 47:51 education, to provide health services, and so  and so forth. But we had to keep in mind that  
  • 47:56 the hosting countries, while they're serving  tremendous public good by hosting these people  
  • 48:00 from neighboring countries, the governments  would need to be working both on reforming  
  • 48:06 their economy, becoming more competitive,  attracting more foreign direct investments.  
  • 48:12 At the same time, also continue to provide support  for their own population, as well as the refugees  
  • 48:18 from neighboring countries. So it is  not just a situation that is created by  
  • 48:24 the arrival of refugees. There are preexisting  issues that also the countries would need  
  • 48:29 to work. And this is something which the  World Bank, with many other organizations,  
  • 48:33 we are quite engaged in that policy  dialogue in a longer term reform agenda  
  • 48:38 that we can support through technical  assistance, through financing, through  
  • 48:42 the country platforms that we have established  with the government in the hosting countries. 
  • 48:47 The fault is on the policy dialogue. I  think a number of speakers before have  
  • 48:52 talked about creating economic opportunities  for refugee women. I think this is something  
  • 48:57 which we have made progress in Jordan, with  the government of Jordan, which has essentially  
  • 49:05 come about comprehensive reforms of the  labor market and to create the conditions  
  • 49:11 for Syrian refugees are meant to work through  flexible work permits, home-based businesses.  
  • 49:17 And these flexible work permits allow them to  work across various sectors of the economy.  
  • 49:22 And as a result, we have seen most Syrian women  actually actively engaging in economic activities.  
  • 49:28 We have worked with the Jordanian government on  digital financial inclusion, which allows the  
  • 49:33 Syrian refugee women to have access to finance.  We are also looking at how we can intensify  
  • 49:39 the support for agriculture-based, value added  services, which would allow refugee women,  
  • 49:46 including those living in camps,  to be able to earn more income. 
  • 49:50 So I think the policy dialogue at the country  level for the Bank is more focused at this time  
  • 49:54 is on access to economic opportunities,  in addition to providing support for  
  • 50:00 increased capacity in the public institutions to  provide education, health and social services. 
  • 50:06 The last point I want to make is about the  financing. I think there have been several  
  • 50:12 innovations in the recent years in trying  to provide, I would say, a fit-for-purpose  
  • 50:17 financing to the refusing hosting countries. But  in countries where you already have a very serious  
  • 50:24 debt sustainability problem, and on top of it,  they have an additional fiscal impact due to the  
  • 50:31 refugee hosting obligations, I think there is a  need for all of us to continue thinking how we can  
  • 50:37 provide much more attractive fit-for-purpose  financing for these hosting countries. 
  • 50:43 Bank has these together with several donors and  UNHCR, the Global Concession Financing Facility,  
  • 50:51 which we use to provide the highly concessional  World Bank financing to Lebanon and Jordan.  
  • 50:56 But we would certainly like to do more.  In the end, I want to stress on the  
  • 51:00 fact that we do have a strong partnership with  UNHCR and also International Rescue Committee.  
  • 51:06 We are working on a very interesting program  in Lebanon to really provide social services to  
  • 51:12 people who have been coping with multiple crisis  in this country. Thank you. Hana, back to you.
  • 51:18 [Hana Brixi] Thank you very much, Saroj.  
  • 51:21 And indeed, you highlighted that the displacement  is often protracted and it's really important to  
  • 51:28 work and find good way to work with host  countries, including a good way to support,  
  • 51:34 to provide financing, influence policies,  influence institutions, and strengthen  
  • 51:38 service delivery in host countries. So  thank you so much for your observations. 
  • 51:43 Let me now turn to Paula. Paula is a member  of the United Nations Secretary-General's  
  • 51:49 Higher-Level Panel on Internal Displacement.  Let me ask you about your experience in  
  • 51:55 Colombia. Colombia has some of the largest  refugee and IDP populations globally.  
  • 52:01 So could you tell us, how do we  involve civil society to better  
  • 52:06 understand and prioritize the needs of women  and girls who have been forcibly displaced?
  • 52:11 [Paula Gaviria Betancur] Thank you, Hana and the World Bank, for this  
  • 52:16 invitation and congratulations for the very timely  and pertinent work from the Gender Dimensions for  
  • 52:22 Displacement program. Both the questions and the  findings show innovation and mostly I think vision  
  • 52:29 about the responses needed. A special hello as  well to my fellow panelists. So I have worked with  
  • 52:35 NGOs and civil society for much of my career,  and I know the essential role that they play. 
  • 52:41 So I'm fortunate today to be able to speak from  a civil societies' perspective, but also from my  
  • 52:48 experience in public service. And more recently,  as you said, as a member of the high-level panel  
  • 52:52 that culminated its work in September with  the submission of the report to the secretary  
  • 52:57 general. So in Colombia, as you know, in 2016,  we put an end to one of the largest conflicts  
  • 53:04 in the Western hemisphere. More than 13,000 ex  combatants were re-integrated to civilian lives,  
  • 53:09 of these 3000 are women. And the agreement has  a 15-year implementation plan and a series of  
  • 53:16 indicators to verify the realization of gender  measures. These actions articulate three decades  
  • 53:23 of progress in legislation, strategic  integration, institutional adaptation,  
  • 53:29 social mobilization, and mainly cultural change  regarding gender equality and women's rights.  
  • 53:35 The peace agreement makes visible and addresses  the conditions of historical discrimination that  
  • 53:41 have allowed differential impacts of the armed  conflict on certain groups, especially women. 
  • 53:47 But since 1997, before even the guiding principles  existed, Colombia developed a legal framework to  
  • 53:53 address the needs of the displaced population.  Since then, its public policy framework has  
  • 53:58 become more sophisticated and progressive in  order to respond in a differentiated manner  
  • 54:03 to the impact of displacement. Thanks  also, and I have to underline this,  
  • 54:07 the supervision of the constitutional court  and it's ruling in 2004 that stated that forced  
  • 54:14 displacement violates the right to equality  and have differential impacts and groups  
  • 54:20 with the special conditions of vulnerability. In view of this, the need for affirmative measures  
  • 54:25 in favor of particular groups within the displaced  population was raised. More recently in 2011,  
  • 54:31 with a strong consensus of society, broad  participation of victims, and political  
  • 54:36 will at its highest level, Colombia designed  a public policy and an institutional framework  
  • 54:41 to address and provide reparations to victims.  This is the Victims and Land Restitution's Law,  
  • 54:47 with a differential approach that is a  crosscutting element of this victim's policy.  
  • 54:52 And it intends to contribute to the  elimination of discrimination, marginalization  
  • 54:57 based on the recognition of the particular  characteristics of certain population groups  
  • 55:02 and a differential response in assistance, as well  as comprehensive reparations, truth and justice.  
  • 55:08 Of particular importance is the recognition  of gender-based violence and sexual violence,  
  • 55:13 which to to-date has left  more than 35,000 victims. 
  • 55:18 We have the most robust and complete  official registry of victims known,  
  • 55:23 which today includes a total 9.2 million victims,  of which 8.2 million are internally displaced. And  
  • 55:31 of these, at least 4 million are women and girls.  This is a critical tool for decision-making. And  
  • 55:39 even though, as you said in the studies,  that data is disaggregating, shortcomings  
  • 55:43 in the information monitoring and evaluation  systems, as they do not include always-optimal  
  • 55:49 variables for adequate gender analysis and  the formulation and implementation of plans. 
  • 55:54 So the magnitude of the victimization that is  proportionate to impacts, especially on women,  
  • 55:58 children, identical communities made it a  priority for us to understand their needs.  
  • 56:04 So the state put in practice responses based on  the recognition of the citizenship of the victims,  
  • 56:12 as well on a psychosocial approach that focuses  on their capacities to be agents of change. 
  • 56:19 So there are mechanisms of participation with  gender parity and that's for the construction  
  • 56:24 of social fabric in the community through  processes of collective reparations and community  
  • 56:29 rehabilitations, where the protagonists are women.  The internally displaced take an active part in  
  • 56:35 the decisions that affect them. As we saw in the  more than 12,500 displaced and host communities  
  • 56:41 with whom we spoke in the panels process;  they have a voice and they want to be heard. 
  • 56:47 So I'm making this quick recount to say that all  this progress has been possible thanks to the role  
  • 56:55 played by civil society during all these years.  I can say with no doubt that thanks to the work,  
  • 57:02 the state is more legitimate, more  transparent, and the rule of law has  
  • 57:07 been sprinting. The state improved its  capacity to develop dedicated responses  
  • 57:12 and solutions for the internal displacement. In particular, I want to highlight the role  
  • 57:17 of women organizations, the role in  the peace negotiation and in general,  
  • 57:22 in getting society and the state to recognize  the existence of the impacts of conflict on women  
  • 57:29 and girls, and to generate adequate responses  for their needs. And I want to take one minute to  
  • 57:37 share with you the role of civil society and the  panel’s work, which includes international NGOs,  
  • 57:43 local NGOs, and researchers. Throughout the panel process, the contributions  
  • 57:48 and engagements were invaluable. We received so  many useful submissions and research projects  
  • 57:55 from NGOs and held several consultations and  events together that had a direct impact on the  
  • 58:02 panel's conclusions and recommendations.  One of which we're really thankful for  
  • 58:08 was the partnership we made with NGOs and UN  agencies to bring the perspective of IDPs and  
  • 58:13 host communities. As I said before, consulted  12,500 IDPs in 22 countries. The panel report  
  • 58:22 includes recommendation support for civil  society organizations and research networks,  
  • 58:28 particularly in countries affected by internal  conflicts, and to adopt an age, gender,  
  • 58:33 and diversity perspective. It also highlights  the importance to build on IDPs capacities,  
  • 58:38 to include them in decision-making process  relevant to them. Finally, throughout the report,  
  • 58:43 it has been said today, the panel stresses the  importance to include IDPs in efforts to reach  
  • 58:48 the SDGs by 2030 so we leave no one behind. More  broadly… Oh, sorry. Yeah. I'm over. It's fine.
  • 58:58 [Hana Brixi] Thank you so much,  
  • 58:59 Paula, for sharing such a powerful  illustration, how civil society  
  • 59:06 can play an instrumental role, not only in the  reaching the individual and supporting individual  
  • 59:13 internal displaced persons and refugees,  but also facilitating systemic change,  
  • 59:18 including the intervention of the constitutional  court and setting up systems that allow the state  
  • 59:25 to better understand the needs and address  the needs of each person, such as through  
  • 59:29 the registries. So thank you very much for these  illustrations. And I now would like to introduce  
  • 59:36 Mamta Murthi, the World Bank vice president  for human development, to share, Mamta, your  
  • 59:43 perspective and your closing remark to this so  wonderful conversation today. Over to you, Mamta.
  • 59:50 [Mamta Murthi] Thank you, Hana,  
  • 59:52 and thank you to all the panelists and  to Mari and to David for what has been an  
  • 59:58 excellent and very rich discussion. I  think I have one of the harder jobs,  
  • 01:00:04 which is to summarize what has been said and  provide some takeaways. I want to say that the  
  • 01:00:10 analytical work that has been put forward on  the gender dimensions of forced displacement  
  • 01:00:17 has really given us an excellent framing and  basis on which to think about the way forward. 
  • 01:00:26 Let me mention a few things that each of you said,  which have been very important in formulating  
  • 01:00:32 my own takeaways. Mari, you highlighted the  urgent need to coordinate response across the  
  • 01:00:40 humanitarian development nexus to make sure  that the work is strengthened. And David,  
  • 01:00:48 in your keynote address, you challenged us all  to be feminist. You said that all programs,  
  • 01:00:54 no matter who finances them, should have a careful  gender analysis. You emphasized making sure that  
  • 01:01:04 female refugees or displaced persons should  have a seat at the table, should have a voice,  
  • 01:01:11 along with female-led civil society organizations.  
  • 01:01:15 And you also emphasized the role of economic  empowerment and economic inclusion programs  
  • 01:01:22 in alleviating some of the constraints that  women in forced displacement situations face. 
  • 01:01:31 Hana, you summarized the really rich evidence that  has now been produced on the multi-dimensional  
  • 01:01:40 aspects of poverty in the context of displacement.  And you really highlighted how gender is an added  
  • 01:01:52 dimension of vulnerability. I really appreciate  what Assistant Secretary General Triggs said about  
  • 01:01:59 the value of the partnership between UNHCR and the  World Bank and the very rich inputs that the World  
  • 01:02:06 Bank receives in order to do its programming. And also your suggestions on how we can do better  
  • 01:02:13 and extend our research to all the additional  countries in which the work is being expanded  
  • 01:02:20 under IDA20. And special rapporteur Jimenez  Damary, I really appreciate what you said about  
  • 01:02:29 positioning displacement as a development  issue. I hadn't really thought about that.  
  • 01:02:34 Also the implication for women and girls. Saroj, you raised many important points about  
  • 01:02:42 the broader context in which development is taking  place, the long horizon that we need to keep in  
  • 01:02:48 mind and the need for more granular research on  the push and pull factors that need to be taken  
  • 01:02:56 into account in order to construct the response  and also to build resilience. And then of course  
  • 01:03:03 you reminded us of the preexisting conditions in  many host countries, which we have to deal with on  
  • 01:03:08 top of dealing with displaced populations. Then finally, Paula, we heard from you  
  • 01:03:15 on the importance of working with civil society  groups, taking them seriously, and also the  
  • 01:03:21 important mechanism that they serve in order  to make governments and development partners  
  • 01:03:27 more accountable for addressing the needs  of women and girls in displaced contexts. 
  • 01:03:37 It's very hard to summarize. I hope I've been able  to do some justice to everything that has been  
  • 01:03:42 said. But I have five key takeaways, things that  I've heard, which particularly resonate with me  
  • 01:03:49 as we think both about the World Bank's gender  strategy in the upcoming period, or also the  
  • 01:03:56 work that we do in context where there are  displaced populations. I'll give five takeaways. 
  • 01:04:05 The first takeaway is really making sure  that when we talk about recovery from COVID,  
  • 01:04:10 it's inclusive. It includes women and it  includes displaced populations, and taking  
  • 01:04:16 the inclusion of that recovery very seriously  in our policy dialogue and in our programming. 
  • 01:04:22 The second takeaway for me is the importance  of analytical work. Many of you highlighted how  
  • 01:04:28 important it is to have this deeper analysis.  We're very happy the new World Development  
  • 01:04:34 Report is focusing on migrants and refugees,  but it really needs to be the apex of a lot  
  • 01:04:40 of analytical work, which helps us further the  cause of women and girls in displaced situations. 
  • 01:04:51 The third takeaway from me is really the  importance of the work that we do on livelihoods  
  • 01:04:56 and on what we call productive inclusion. So it is  work that actually helps include many more women  
  • 01:05:03 and girls in employment and earning opportunities,  and helps address the constraints that they face  
  • 01:05:14 in achieving these earning opportunities, which  are a very important source of empowerment.  
  • 01:05:21 I think there's much more we can do in this area.  It's already a very strong area of focus for us,  
  • 01:05:26 but it's something that we  can deepen and take further. 
  • 01:05:30 My fourth takeaway is really around the point that  David and others made on the refugee compact and  
  • 01:05:40 our commitments to making sure that refugees and  displaced persons have a voice in both policy  
  • 01:05:47 discussions and in programming both the design and  implementation of programs. This is already a part  
  • 01:05:54 of our economic and social framework here at the  World Bank. So it's very consistent with what we  
  • 01:06:01 already intend to do. But we need to  make sure that we do this systematically,  
  • 01:06:05 and consultation and inclusion is meaningful. Finally, I want to say that this discussion has  
  • 01:06:12 provided us with so many inputs that I think it  re-emphasizes the need for constant consultation  
  • 01:06:20 and working with all our stakeholders and  partners to make sure that we can discharge  
  • 01:06:26 our responsibilities in a much stronger way. So  I really want to thank you for all your inputs,  
  • 01:06:33 which have given us a lot of food for thought  and which we intend to take on board as we think  
  • 01:06:39 about systemic solutions. So that we can support  large-scale programming that contributes to a  
  • 01:06:49 stronger global response to the  issue of women and girls in displaced  
  • 01:06:57 context. So thank you very much for your  contributions and your strong participation,  
  • 01:07:03 and I really look forward to working with  all of you and taking this agenda forward.  
  • 01:07:10 Thank you. And goodbye. And I think this is  the conclusion of the event, isn't it, Hana?
  • 01:07:15 [Hana Brixi] Thank you very  
  • 01:07:18 much to all our panelists. I'm  very much looking forward to  
  • 01:07:21 continuing the conversation, the research  and the collaboration for action. Thank you.
  • 01:07:27 [Paula Gaviria Betancur] Thank you.
  • 01:07:29 [Hana Brixi] Bye.
  • 01:07:30 [Gillian Triggs] Bye everyone.

Gender Dimensions of Forced Displacement

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- Watch with interpretation in Français | Español -

Violent conflict and the rapid onset of climate change are sending rates of forced displacement to unprecedented levels. At the end of 2020, there were over 80 million forcibly displaced persons worldwide, doubling since 2010. Although commitments to addressing the crisis are growing, knowledge gaps surrounding the impacts of forced displacement persist, especially in terms of how men and women are affected differently.

The World Bank’s Gender Dimensions of Forced Displacement (GDFD) program has sought to bridge some of these gaps by studying how gender inequality interacts with and compounds forced displacement, specifically in terms of poverty, livelihoods, gender-based violence, and social norms. Bringing together researchers, practitioners, civil society and leaders, this high-level launch event aims to share new results from the GDFD program, review implications for policy design, and shed light on the importance of embedding principles of gender equality within the development of durable solutions to forced displacement. 

00:00 Welcome, opening remarks, and the work done by the World Bank
06:15 The work done by the International Rescue Committee
26:38 The work done by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
36:39 Long-term consequences of displacement and programmatic response
43:20 Differentiated impacts of displacement on men and women / Syrian refugee crisis
51:44 Involving civil society to better understand and prioritize the needs
59:34 Closing remarks


Speakers

Moderator