Refugees in the Digital Economy

Author:

Easton-Calabria Evan1,Hackl Andreas2

Affiliation:

1. Tufts University; University of Oxford

2. University of Edinburgh

Abstract

The current scale and duration of displacement prompts renewed urgency about livelihoods prospects for displaced people and the role of humanitarian organisations in fostering them. This special issue focuses on how aid organisations, together with the private sector and other actors, have worked to include refugees in new forms of online work within the web-based digital economy. Building on comparative analysis and a comprehensive review of the field of digital livelihoods among the forcibly displaced, in this introductory article we argue that including refugees in this digital economy is currently neither a sustainable form of humanitarian relief nor is it a development solution that provides large-scale decent work. We show how digital livelihoods approaches have gained a special footing in the middle ground between short-term economic relief and long-term development. Indeed, digital economies seemingly offer a variety of ‘quick-fix’ solutions at the transition from humanitarian emergency towards long-term development efforts. While digital economies harbour significant potential, this cannot be fully realised unless current efforts to include refugees in digital economies are complemented by efforts to address digital divides, uphold refugees’ rights, and ensure more decent working conditions.

Publisher

Manchester University Press

Subject

General Medicine

Reference56 articles.

1. New Skills Now: Inclusion in the Digital Economy;Accenture,2017

2. Digital Politics, Humanitarianism and the Datafication of Refugees;Ajana, B.,2019

3. Hidden Transcripts of the Gig Economy: Labour Agency and the New Art of Resistance among African Gig Workers;Anwar, M. A,2019

4. Humanitarian Innovation: The State of the Art;Betts, A.,2014

5. Refugee Economies in Kenya;Betts, A.,2020

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