SYRIAN REFUGEE RESPONSE: Vulnerability Assessment of Syrian Refugees in Lebanon LEBANON HIGHLIGHTS OF THE SURVEY. August 8, 2014

Similar documents
n 95,636 individuals benefited from water storage; n 78,856 individuals benefited from the installation of household latrines;

SYRIAN REFUGEE RESPONSE: LEBANON INTER-AGENCY UPDATE LEBANON

SYRIAN REFUGEE RESPONSE: LEBANON INTER-AGENCY UPDATE LEBANON

SYRIAN REFUGEE RESPONSE: LEBANON INTER-AGENCY UPDATE

UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 9 APRIL 2018, 15:00 HOURS PARIS TIME

SYRIAN REFUGEE RESPONSE IN LEBANON: EDUCATION UPDATE

Vulnerability Assessment of Syrian Refugees (VASyR) in Lebanon

UNHCR Syria Winterization Update 1 September 10 December 2018 Winterization programme progress

VASyR Vulnerability Assessment of Syrian Refugees. 27April 2016

UNDER EMBARGO UNTIL 10 APRIL 2019, 15:00 HOURS PARIS TIME. Development aid drops in 2018, especially to neediest countries

Regional winterization programme progress report

SYRIA CRISIS FAIR SHARE ANALYSIS 2015

Regional winterization progress report

For information on WFP s Syria Crisis Response in , please use the QR Code or access through the link: wfp.org/syriainfo

Regional winterization programme progress report

APRIL UPDATE. News from April Outcomes of the Brussels conference Amina s story. Inter-Agency Update Lebanon April Photo: UNHCR/Houssam Hariri

UNHCR Syria Winterization Update

January UPDATE January developments Recycling in Sarafand Support provided to Lebanese Public Institutions in 2015

ISSUE BRIEF: U.S. Immigration Priorities in a Global Context

WORLDWIDE DISTRIBUTION OF PRIVATE FINANCIAL ASSETS

Contributions to UNHCR For Budget Year 2014 As at 31 December 2014

China s Aid Approaches in the Changing International Aid Architecture

Widening of Inequality in Japan: Its Implications

On aid orphans and darlings (Aid Effectiveness in aid allocation by respective donor type)

Aid spending by Development Assistance Committee donors in 2015

Vulnerability Assessment and Targeting of Syrian Refugees in Lebanon

PROFILING OF SYRIAN REFUGEES IN LEBANON 2015 SUMMARY REPORT

How many students study abroad and where do they go?

Size and Development of the Shadow Economy of 31 European and 5 other OECD Countries from 2003 to 2013: A Further Decline

SYRIA CRISIS FAIR SHARE ANALYSIS 2016

Acknowledgements. WFP is the world s largest humanitarian agency fighting hunger worldwide.

chapter 3 donors: who gives assistance?

SITUATION UPDATE AUGUST 2015 SYRIA CRISIS REGIONAL RESPONSE. Fighting Hunger Worldwide

Venezuela Situation As of June 2018

Mapping physical therapy research

VISA POLICY OF THE REPUBLIC OF KAZAKHSTAN

UNHCR - Syria Main Activities January 2019

19,085 The number of new arrivals registered since the beginning of January 2017.

FOOD ASSISTANCE TO. Refugees. Refugee Operations faces a significant funding shortfall

OECD expert meeting hosted by the Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research Oslo, Norway 2-3 June 2008 ICTs and Gender Pierre Montagnier

ASYLUM IN THE EU Source: Eurostat 4/6/2013, unless otherwise indicated ASYLUM APPLICATIONS IN THE EU27

HIGHLIGHTS. There is a clear trend in the OECD area towards. which is reflected in the economic and innovative performance of certain OECD countries.

International investment resumes retreat

April UPDATE. April developments Accountability to Persons of Concern Asmaa s Story

Aegean Islands. FACT SHEET > Aegean Islands / 1-31 January 2018

South Africa - A publisher s perspective. STM/PASA conference 11 June, 2012, Cape Town Mayur Amin, SVP Research & Academic Relations

FEBRUARY UPDATE. Inter-Agency Update Lebanon February Photo: UNHCR/Houssam Hariri

Europe in Figures - Eurostat Yearbook 2008 The diversity of the EU through statistics

However, a full account of their extent and makeup has been unknown up until now.

Settling In 2018 Main Indicators of Immigrant Integration

International Humanitarian Pledging Conference for Syria Kuwait 15 January 2014

INVESTING IN AN OPEN AND SECURE EUROPE Two Funds for the period

Russian Federation. OECD average. Portugal. United States. Estonia. New Zealand. Slovak Republic. Latvia. Poland

NON - CLASSIFIED. EADRCC Situation Report Nº10 SYRIAN REFUGEES in JORDAN (latest update in BOLD)

EU Breakdown of number of cases registered and number of articles seized by product type Number of cases registered by Customs %

Visa issues. On abolition of the visa regime

New York County Lawyers Association Continuing Legal Education Institute 14 Vesey Street, New York, N.Y (212)

Bahrain Telecom Pricing International Benchmarking. December 2018

Belgium s foreign trade

RAPID NEED ASSESSMENT REPORT

1. Why do third-country audit entities have to register with authorities in Member States?

List of Main Imports to the United States

International Rescue Committee (IRC) Refugee 101. From Harm to Home Rescue.org

Zimbabwe 31 July 2018

The Extraordinary Extent of Cultural Consumption in Iceland

CO3.6: Percentage of immigrant children and their educational outcomes

FACT SHEET #1, FISCAL YEAR (FY) 2016 NOVEMBER 19, 2015

April aid spending by Development Assistance Committee (DAC) donors in factsheet

International students travel in Europe

Bahrain Egypt Iraq Israel Jordan Kuwait Lebanon Oman Qatar Saudi Arabia Syrian Arab Republic United Arab Emirates

Ukraine May 2017

Venezuela Situation As of May 2018

European patent filings

Details of the largest operations in the region and its subregions in 2014 are presented on the Global Focus website at

IMMIGRATION, ASYLUM AND NATIONALITY ACT 2006 INFORMATION FOR CANDIDATES

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

Re: A Call for Human Rights Concerns to be reflected in the Fortaleza Declaration of Sixth BRICS Summit

Taiwan s Development Strategy for the Next Phase. Dr. San, Gee Vice Chairman Taiwan External Trade Development Council Taiwan

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

Asylum Trends. Appendix: Eurostat data

Translation from Norwegian

IMMIGRATION IN THE EU

Identification of the respondent: Fields marked with * are mandatory.

GERMANY, JAPAN AND INTERNATIONAL PAYMENT IMBALANCES

Liberia February 2018

UNHCR Global Resettlement Statistical Report 2014

Rankings: Universities vs. National Higher Education Systems. Benoit Millot

OECD Affordable Housing Database OECD - Social Policy Division - Directorate of Employment, Labour and Social Affairs

Education Quality and Economic Development

THE EUROPEAN UNIFIED PATENT SYSTEM:

New technologies applied to travel facilitation airport controls and visa issuance

BRIEFING. International Migration: The UK Compared with other OECD Countries.

BULGARIAN TRADE WITH EU IN JANUARY 2017 (PRELIMINARY DATA)

2017 Recurrent Discussion on Fundamental

ODA REPORTING OF IN-DONOR COUNTRY REFUGEE COSTS. Members methodologies for calculating costs

OECD Strategic Education Governance A perspective for Scotland. Claire Shewbridge 25 October 2017 Edinburgh

BULGARIAN TRADE WITH EU IN THE PERIOD JANUARY - MARCH 2016 (PRELIMINARY DATA)

Global Variations in Growth Ambitions

KINGDOM OF CAMBODIA NATION RELIGION KING 3 TOURISM STATISTICS REPORT. September 2010

Transcription:

SYRIAN REFUGEE RESPONSE: Vulnerability Assessment of Syrian Refugees in Lebanon August 8, 2014 #FutureOfSyria Agencies and the Government of Lebanon had been requesting US$1.89 billion in the interagency funding appeal. The mid-year review in June resulted in a downward revision of these requirements to US$ 1.68 billion. US$ 443 million - 29 per cent - has been received as of 8 July. LEBANON HIGHLIGHTS OF THE SURVEY Through interviews with 1,750 Syrian refugee households (HH) under the Vulnerability Assessment of Syrian Refugees conducted in 2014, it was determined that: 16% were female headed households (HH); 82% HH reported paying rent for shelter; 33% have no access to drinking water; 66% HH had restricted movement because of insecurity with the main cause being their neighbors; 34% HH have at least one pregnant or lactating woman; 2 to 3 children per HH are in school age (3-17 years old); 74% HH were somewhat food insecure; and, 50% HH have debt that exceeds US$ 400.

What is VASyR? A concept note, including the methodology and a multi-sectorial questionnaire, was agreed upon and drafted by the UN in collaboration with the Government of Lebanon. VASyR is the Vulnerability Assessment of Syrian Refugees in Lebanon aimed at gaining knowledge of their living conditions and informing decision-making on programmatic activities. It is a joint UNHCR, UNICEF and WFP multi-sectorial household survey conducted with the registered and awaiting-registration Syrian refugee population in Lebanon. VASyR is designed to give accurate, multi-sectorial vulnerability criteria of the refugee population for the implementation of humanitarian assistance and to enable humanitarian stakeholders to improve their programming and target assistance for the most vulnerable. VASyR 2014 The 2014 survey provided an evaluation of the vulnerability situation of Syrian refugees - one year after the original 2013 VASyR in Lebanon, and the Syria crisis now into its fourth year. Methodology 1,750 Syrian refugee households were interviewed in May 2014 and were selected on the basis of: The Last multisectorial survey representative at national level took place in 2013. Registration status with UNHCR; Representation of Syrian refugees residing in different areas in Lebanon; Cluster of random selection proportional to population size According to sector specific criteria agreed by sectors covered by the humanitarian response, households were classified under the following categories of vulnerability: severe, high, medium and low. UN and Partner agencies organized 35 clusters of 10 households each in five regions in Lebanon: Bekaa, South, Beirut and Mount Lebanon (BML), Tripoli and Akkar.

Results Household (HH) composition The average household size is 6.6 family members compared to 7.7 in 2013. About 40 per cent of households had seven or more members. 44 per cent households had children <2 65 per cent HH had children <5 20 per cent HH have an elder in the HH 2 per cent HH reported taking care of an un-related child <18 16 per cent were female headed households 12 per cent were single headed households with dependents Shelter A majority of households reported living in apartments and independent houses (59 per cent), while over 40 per cent per cent reported living in tents, collective shelters, unfinished constructions, garages, squatting, and separate rooms. Households in tented settlements amounted to over 14 per cent. Most households (82 per cent) reported paying rent for shelter including for pieces of land where tents are erected. The average paid rent was US$250 per month.

Some five per cent of interviewed households were staying with relatives or host communities. The remaining households either benefited from assistance or had an employer that provided shelter, or squatting (14 per cent). WASH, Assets and Security The survey revealed that 33 per cent of interviewed households did not have drinking water compared to 28 per cent in 2013. 3% 3%2% 1% Drinking Water 0% 4% 3% 4% 5% 10% 19% 34% Bottled water household water > 2 Hours household water < 2 hours protected well public standpipe Water provider Approximately 12 per cent of households (twice the percentage of HH in 2013) did not have access to bathrooms (i.e., a place for washing/bathing) at all, and out of those who had access, over 7 per cent households were sharing bathrooms and latrines with 15 persons or more. In 2013, the percentage of HH owning different household assets including mattresses, beds, cooking utensils and stoves was lower in general than in 2014. The number of assets owned by Syrian refugees interviewed has increased mainly when it comes to beds, winter clothes, refrigerators, stoves, kitchen utensils and water heaters.

Health 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 40% 32% 49% 41% 38% 52% 45% 40% 19% 15% 0% Akkar Bekaa BML South Tripoli 5 Total Medicine costs Doctor fees Rejected Don t know where to go Distance Inadequate treatment Other Physical limitations Pending appointment The most common type of health care assistance provided by humanitarian actors was sharing costs with patient. Around 16 per cent of households benefited from free primary health care provided by humanitarian actors. Nearly one third of households that required health assistance could not access it mainly because of health expenditures they cannot afford. Education 1,567 (34 per cent) of children are attending school. But a large number of school age children remain outside school. The main reason why children did not attend school was lack of financial resources. The second reason for non-enrollment was that schools have reached their maximum capacity. In some areas, there were simply no schools available, or a lack of transportation preventing children from attending classes.

Food Security, Livelihoods and Coping Strategies Nearly 74 per cent of households faced some degree of food insecurity, with the majority falling under the mild food insecurity classification. Almost 13 per cent of households were classified as moderately or severely food insecure. This is an important decrease compared to the VASyR results in 2013. Less preferred/expensive food Reduced meals portion size Reduced number of meals Restrict consumption by adults Borrowed food/help from Send household members to Spent days without eating 7% 95% 74% 68% 49% 46% 0% 20% 40% 60% 80%100%120% Akkar Bekaa BML South T5 Total Coping strategies are the indicator that reflected the deteriorating situation for Syrian refugees compared with 2013. It was also the main determining factor for food insecurity. Nearly 68 per cent of the interviewed households reported having reduced the number of meals (and/or money to buy food).

Less preferred/expensive food 95% Reduced meals portion size 74% Reduced number of meals 68% Restrict consumption by adults 49% Borrowed food/help from friends or 46% Send household members to eat Spent days without eating 7% 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% 120% Akkar Bekaa BML South T5 Total The main livelihood source for members of households interviewed included: Food vouchers: 41 per cent Nonagricultural casual labor: 29 per cent Skilled work: 13 per cent 77 per cent HH relied on other livelihood sources such as nonagricultural casual labor and debts or loans. Approximately 80 per cent of households borrowed money or received credit. The main reasons reported for borrowing money or obtaining credit were to buy food (73 per cent), to pay rent (50 per cent) and thirdly, to cover health expenses (31 per cent). Friends or relatives in Lebanon were the main lenders of money. Assistance Nearly 70 per cent registered households reported that they receive food vouchers on a regular basis. 41 per cent received hygiene kits and some 25 per cent of households benefited from regular health care.

DONORS USA, Kuwait, EU, Japan, UK, Germany, Australia, Norway, Canada, Denmark, Netherlands, Russia, France, Sweden, Switzerland, Finland, Italy, Ireland, Austria, Republic of Korea, Spain, Luxemburg, Estonia, Czech Republic, Iceland, Greece, Hungary, Lithuania, Chile, Mexico, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, State of Qatar, and Slovakia. Contributions have also been received from the Emergency Response Fund (ERF) and the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) as well as from private donors, national and international organizations. AGENCIES THAT HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO THIS REPORT