Refugee Camps: Initiation, Current Conditions, Development & Integration with the City
Abstract
The issue of Palestinian refugees exists for nearly 70 years now, starting from the
occupation of Palestine by Israeli forces and immigrants in the late 40s. Approximately
900,000 Palestinian refugees were forced to leave Palestine following the 1948 Arab–
Israeli war. The majority of them fled to neighboring Arab countries; Jordan, Lebanon,
Syria and Egypt. Following the 1967 war; another wave of Palestinian refugees fled to
Jordan, when Israel occupied the Gaza and West Bank along with other Arab territories.
These waves of refugees who moved to Jordan transformed its demographic structure and
reformed Jordan’s socio-economic, political, and cultural life.
The Syrian conflict and civil war onwards of 2011 has seen thousands of Syrian and
Palestinian refugees being forced to leave Syria and move to adjacent countries, creating
accommodation issues for the hosts.
The governments of the said host nations found it essential to formulate new policies to
accommodate the refugee flux.
One of the major historical issues of refugee camps is that they are considered by both the
host governments and refugees themselves as a temporary solution until the conflict gets
resolved. In some cases, however, what began as temporary arrangements have morphed
into permanent residences; this is, especially true of the hapless Palestinian refugees.
This research studies the structure and development of the refugee camps and looks at ways
in which the camps can be better integrated with the surrounding cities and communities.
It also provides a high-level study for two cases in Jordan, Al-Baqaa and Al-Zaatari refugee
camps, with a particular focus on their edges and connections with the surrounding urban
and social fabric.
The areas of concern were explored in several ways starting from the literature review for
the background and history, analyzing case studies, interviewing refugees and involved
personnel ending with summarizing the outcomes.
The research concludes by proposing urban design enhancements that can be implemented
in the existing camps to create a better interface with the adjoining land and settlements.
These are accompanied by a list of recommendations to modify the legislation and to create
best practices for future refugee camps.
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/11226Collections
- Urban Planning and Design [42 items ]