JDC ANNUAL REPORT

2025

Image: © UNHCR/Gwenn Dubourthoumieu

Foreword

When resources are scarce, the quality of decisions matters—and decisions are only as good as the evidence behind them. This must include data on forcibly displaced people

— Shubham Chaudhuri, Director of the Fragility, Conflict and Violence (FCV) Group at the World Bank

Without reliable socioeconomic data on forcibly displaced people, the investments needed to support longer-term solutions are far harder to justify or target effectively

— Dominique Hyde, Director of External Relations at UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency

Image: © UNHCR/Jaime Giménez

Image: © UNHCR/Reason Moses Runyanga

Expanding the JDC Portfolio

Demand remains high

proposals submitted from World Bank and UNHCR teams

requested

countries covered

Following joint technical and strategic review:

proposals approved

allocated

This reflects strong and growing demand for displacement data to inform policy and investment decisions.

Image: © UNHCR/Charity Nzomo

Statistical Inclusion

Anchoring Inclusion in National Systems

Statistical inclusion remains central to enabling more sustainable responses. This is reflected in how displacement is increasingly treated as a routine part of national data collection—integrated into household, labor force, and enterprise surveys rather than addressed through one-off exercises.

Reflecting this shift, 25 national statistical systems now explicitly include FDPs (up from 18 in 2024), generating more consistent, comparable data with host populations on incomes, employment, and access to services—informing how governments plan and allocate resources.

Expanding Inclusion Through National Surveys

In Lebanon, a sub-national Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) covered host communities, displaced Syrians, and Palestinian refugee camps—enabling comparisons across groups and identifying disparities.

Survey operations are underway in Kenya, Bangladesh, Mali, Djibouti, South Sudan, Yemen, Mozambique, and Mauritania.

In several contexts, FDPs are included in nationally representative surveys for the first time. These efforts expand data on welfare and living standards while strengthening national capacity to produce decision-grade evidence.

Institutionalizing Statistical Inclusion

Earlier investments are becoming embedded in national systems:

  • Honduras — IDPs included in the national household survey without external financing
  • Central African Republic — displaced and stateless populations integrated into the census and upcoming MICS

This reflects a shift from externally supported activities to routine national practice.

Advancing Statistical Inclusion Globally

Global partnerships continue to reinforce this agenda:

  • Inclusion highlighted at the Global Refugee Forum (2025)
  • Progress under the Multistakeholder Pledge on Statistical Inclusion
  • Continued engagement with EGRISS to strengthen international standards
  • Technical collaboration in Latin America to improve measurement approaches

What this Means

✓ Growing alignment around statistical inclusion

✓ Stronger consistency across countries

✓ Inclusion becoming part of the global data architecture

Targeted Data and Analysis for Policy and Operations

Targeted data and analysis, together with integration into national statistical and survey systems, address evidence gaps and inform policy dialogue, planning, operational responses, and investment decisions.

Malaysia

HARMONY Survey comparing refugee and host households

Data on human capital, skills, and working conditions

🎯 Strengthening policy dialogue on economic participation

Moldova

Socioeconomic assessment identifying barriers to refugee employment

🎯 Informing the 2025–2026 Refugee Response Plan and labor market discussions

Sudan

Welfare Monitoring Survey expanded to include refugees and IDPs

🎯 Supporting prioritization of assistance in a fragile context

Lebanon

Sub-national MICS covering host communities, displaced Syrians, and Palestinian refugee camps

🎯 Supporting policy and planning in a protracted displacement context

Malawi

Dzaleka refugee camp integrated into national surveys

🎯 Providing comparable data and informing more equitable service delivery and planning

Peru

National Household Survey expanded to include Venezuelans

🎯 Informing poverty analysis and multi-year planning

Uganda

Refugees included in the national survey framework

🎯 Generating nationally representative evidence on education, labor markets, and living conditions, supporting policy dialogue and development investment decisions

 

Why this matters

🎯 Displacement is being integrated into national data systems
🎯 Evidence is informing policy, planning, and investment
🎯 Stronger data systems are enabling more sustainable, nationally led responses

 

Image credits: UNHCR – Malaysia (Patricia Krivanek); Moldova (Mark Macdonald); Sudan (Mohamed Ahmed Ishag); Lebanon (Road to Films); Malawi (Hélène Caux); Peru (Nicolo Filippo Rosso); Uganda (Martin Jjumba); final slide (Hasan Alabdallah)

Global Dialogue and Research Partnerships

The JDC continues to convene governments, researchers, and partners to strengthen collaboration.

What This Means

✓ Demand for policy-relevant data is increasing

✓ Stronger links between research and decision-making

✓ A more connected global data ecosystem