1st Edition

How Close is Close? Assessing Uganda’s Progressive Refugee Policy in the Era of COVID-19

Edited By Marco d’Errico, Donato Romano, Paul Winters Copyright 2025
    140 Pages
    by Routledge

    Uganda is home to 1.5 million refugees from DRC, Burundi, South Sudan and other countries. The Uganda political framework is one of the most progressive and inclusive toward refugees. Only a fraction of the refugees is likely to go back to their home countries. This book assesses Uganda’s progressive refugee policy with reference to how it functioned in the era of COVID-19 using a unique panel data collected between 2017 and 2021.

    The Uganda Refugee Policy (2006) and the Refugee Regulations (2010) grant refugees wide-ranging rights that include allocating land for agriculture purposes, freedom of movement, and the right to seek employment. However, the magnitude and the speed of influx of refugees in recent years have posed critical challenges to the sustainability of these progressive policies. On top of this, unpredictable and unprecedented crises have emerged, such as COVID-19 and the Ukraine war, that have threatened food security and the resilience of livelihoods, value chains and food systems. The chapters in this book assess Uganda’s progressive refugee policy with reference to how it functioned in the era of COVID-19. They focus on the following three main areas: (i) the economic relationship and coexistence between host and refugees’ communities; (ii) the success and sustainability of the current model of assistance; and (iii) the response to COVID-19 on communities’ welfare and long-term prospects. Addressing these issues is possible due to a unique panel dataset of thirteen refugee settlements and neighbouring host communities specifically collected for these purposes.


    Investigating the economic consequences of the integration between host and refugees’ communities and offering new evidence with specific reference to Uganda, this book will be a key resource for scholars, researchers and practitioners of development studies, African studies, economics, and sociology. It was originally published as a special issue of The Journal of Development Studies.

    Introduction: Assessing Uganda’s Progressive Refugee Policy in the Era of COVID-19:

    Marco d’Errico, Paul Winters and Donato Romano

     

    1. Economic Integration between Refugee Settlements and Host Communities

    Lauren Oliver, Marco D’Errico and Paul Winters

     

    2. Poverty Dynamics and Poverty Traps among Refugee and Host Communities in Uganda

    Giulia Malevolti and Donato Romano

     

    3. Training Refugees: Lights and Shadows in the Context of the Self-Reliance Strategy Implemented in Uganda

    Marina Mastrorillo,Antonio Scognamillo and Adriana Ignaciuk

     

    4. Transfers as a Means to Mitigate COVID-19 Impacts on Food Security: Evidence from Refugee and Host Communities Uganda

    Marco d’Errico, Ellestina Jumbe, Lauren Oliver, Rebecca Pietrelli, Irene Staffieri and Paul Winters

     

    5. Identifying the COVID-19 Transmission Channels on Poverty and Food Security in Refugee-Hosting Districts of Uganda

    Margherita Squarcina and Donato Romano

    Biography

    Marco d'Errico is Economist at the Agri-Food Economics Division of Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, and Contract Professor at La Sapienza, Rome. He has vast experience on impact evaluation of resilience and food security interventions mostly in protracted crisis countries.

     

    Donato Romano is Professor of Agricultural Economics and Director of the PhD Program in Development Economics and Local Systems – DELoS at the University of Florence, Italy. His current research interests include food and nutrition security analysis, with a focus on household vulnerability and resilience, and the analysis of the impact of climate change on conflicts and violence. He has been a consultant for many international organizations including FAO, IFAD, WFP and the World Bank.  He is also a member of the Board of the European Association of Agricultural Economists - EAAE. He holds a PhD in Forest Economics and Policy from the University of Florence

     

    Paul Winters is the Keough-Hesburgh Professor of Global Affairs in the University of Notre Dame’s Keough School of Global Affairs. His research and teaching focus on rural poverty, food insecurity and climate change and the evaluation of policies and programs designed to address these issues.  Prior to joining Notre Dame, he worked at the International Fund for Agricultural Development, American University in Washington, DC, the Inter-American Development Bank, the University of New England in Australia, and the International Potato Center in Lima, Peru. He holds a PhD in Agricultural and Resource Economics from the University of California at Berkeley.