Brief

IDS Policy Briefing 197

The Role of Urban Public Spaces in Managing Displacement in Norway

Published on 24 June 2022

Refugees, temporarily displaced people, and migrants who arrive in Norwegian cities would benefit from equitable access to urban public spaces.

Research suggests that the design and management of public urban spaces and local neighbourhood centres can improve migrants’ wellbeing and encourage local cross-cultural interactions. Permanent architectural and urban spaces planned and built for emergency purposes should benefit people who are displaced as well as host communities. To achieve this, urban planning, and migration and displacement management – two mostly separate fields of governance – should collaborate and learn from each other.

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Hemmersam, P.; Breivik-Khan, H.; Ip, M. and Selmer-Olsen, T. (2022) 'The Role of Urban Public Spaces in Managing Displacement in Norway', IDS Policy Briefing 197, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/IDS.2022.041

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published by
Institute of Development Studies
doi
10.19088/IDS.2022.041
language
English

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