Make sure you register to our monthly newsletter, it's going out soon! Stay up do date about the latest energy news and our current activities.
Click here to register!

Difference between revisions of "Publication - Scaling Sustainable Energy Services for Displaced People and their Hosts"

From energypedia
***** (***** | *****)
m
Tag: 2017 source edit
***** (***** | *****)
Line 12: Line 12:
 
|Country Pub=Ethiopia, Jordan, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda
 
|Country Pub=Ethiopia, Jordan, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda
 
|Pub Download=https://www.chathamhouse.org/2022/10/scaling-sustainable-energy-services-displaced-people-and-their-hosts
 
|Pub Download=https://www.chathamhouse.org/2022/10/scaling-sustainable-energy-services-displaced-people-and-their-hosts
|Pub Newsletter=No
+
|Pub Newsletter=Yes
 
|Pub Tag Renewable=Renewable Energy
 
|Pub Tag Renewable=Renewable Energy
 
|Pub Tag Climate=Climate Change
 
|Pub Tag Climate=Climate Change
Line 20: Line 20:
 
|Pub Tag Other=Other
 
|Pub Tag Other=Other
 
}}
 
}}
 
 
[[Category:Ethiopia]]
 
[[Category:Ethiopia]]
 
[[Category:Jordan]]
 
[[Category:Jordan]]

Revision as of 06:45, 18 October 2022

►Add a New Publication
►See All Latest Publications

Title
Scaling Sustainable Energy Services for Displaced People and their Hosts
Publisher
CHATHAM HOUSE
Author
Owen Grafham, Glada Lahn, James Haselip
Published in
October 2022
Abstract
Access to clean, safe and sustainable energy – the focus of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 7 – is one of the principal needs of developing-country populations, for cooking, heating, light, communication, study, livelihoods and security. But people who have been forced to flee their homes, some 80 per cent of whom find refuge in low- and middle-income countries, nearly always remain outside national energy policy and planning mechanisms, even though most live and work within a local economy.

This research paper draws on five case studies – focusing on Ethiopia, Jordan, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda – to explore how humanitarian efforts to scale up access to sustainable energy for refugees and other displaced communities are affected by policy and governance structures in host countries.

The authors underscore that national energy polices and ambitions for low-carbon development pathways need to be accompanied by frameworks that support integration and self-reliance for displaced people, including through rights to work, move and participate freely in host economies. Equally, humanitarian organizations need to prioritize structures, processes and fundraising mechanisms that enable them to attract investment for sustainable energy initiatives and deploy resources carefully and meaningfully.
URL


Admin:
Yes


"Ethiopia, Jordan, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda" is not in the list (Worldwide, Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Armenia, Australia, ...) of allowed values for the "Country Pub" property.