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2022:Disasters drove 32.6 million recorded internal displacements

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Millions of people migrate each year because of the impacts of climate change and other extreme environmental events. While people can and do cross international borders, typically this movement is within their own country, a report by Migration Policy Institute, MPI said. In 2022 alone, it said disasters drove some 32.6 million recorded internal displacements—the highest figure in more than a decade. This includes people forced to flee floods, monsoons, and other shock events; an additional unknown number moved in response to gradually deteriorating environmental conditions such as sea-level rise, coastal erosion, extreme heat, and climatic variability.

Yet, as worrying as these statistics are, the vast majority of people living in places highly vulnerable to climate change do not migrate. If migration or displacement was the inevitable response to environmental change, the world would be in the midst of a much more dramatic upheaval. The fact that it is not could be interpreted as a good thing, since being settled is often seen as normal and even desirable and, therefore, unproblematic.

However, the reality is both more complicated and more concerning. Catastrophic predictions that climate change will create huge numbers of desperate migrants ignores that the relationship between migration and climate change is non-linear. Its impacts are not distributed evenly nor responded to equally. Some individuals can adapt in place, while many people do not have the capability to move, and others might be able to but are reluctant to leave homelands to which they feel irrevocably bound. When migration is not a viable option, people who are unable or unwilling to move may be the ones most negatively affected by climate change, as they become trapped in increasingly uninhabitable locations.

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Immobility: As Complicated as Migration

Climate-linked migration is often portrayed in alarmist media reports as negative or abnormal, but more recent thinking has positioned it differently. Especially when done voluntarily and pre-emptively, movement can positively affect people and communities by bringing them to safety or offering them opportunities to improve their well-being. These benefits can be shared: labor migration to the city or abroad may be the best way to fund improvements that allow loved ones to withstand more extreme climate events back in their places of origin. Historically, many societies have engaged in some sort of mobility to respond to changing environmental and economic conditions. Pastoralist groups such as Fulani herders in West Africa have done so for centuries. For these communities, staying in place is the exception. Abundant research on the climate-migration nexus thus emphasizes the actual or potential power of migration—and mobility more broadly—to act as an adaptation strategy. This shifts away from predominately negative portrayals of climate migrants, for whom migration is considered an act of last resort and desperation.

If human mobility can be a relatively rational and even lifesaving response to damaging environmental events, one might expect many more people to move than currently do. Only a small share of all people affected by climate impacts relocate. Why do people stay in places where their homes, livelihoods, and their very lives are threatened? This article examines the range of reasons why some people do not migrate away from climate impacts, whether by choice or because they are forced to remain.

Human mobility is spurred by any number of reasons and is almost always multicausal. It stands to reason that a range of motivations drive non-migration, too. Just as there is no singular cause of migration, there is no one explanation for why people, households, or communities remain in place. Evidence shows a variety of micro-, meso-, and macro-level factors influence these decisions, including personal wealth, social connections abroad, cultural norms, and government policy.

One reason why so many people stay in regions affected by environmental change (including but not limited to changing climate) is because not everyone is equally affected. Extreme estimates that billions of people will become “climate refugees” (a fraught and legally meaningless term) often rely on deterministic and linear assumptions rather than empirical evidence, supposing that everyone living in a vulnerable area will be forced to move. This overlooks the differential vulnerabilities across and within regions, communities, and even households. In a sudden-onset event such as a hurricane or wildfire, some households are less exposed or more resilient than others. For instance, people living directly on coastlines are more threatened by coastal erosion than their neighbors even a few streets back. Nonagricultural households may not feel the economic strain of erratic rainfall in the same way as farmers.

Other people may be exposed to environmental change but manage to adapt in situ, limiting the pressure to migrate. Wealthier households may be able to install irrigation systems, invest in drought-resistant crops, purchase better fishing equipment, or build stronger homes that can withstand increasingly intense and frequent storms. Some also migrate so that others can stay; migration-generated social and financial remittances can increase the adaptive capacity and resilience of those who remain and decrease their reliance on local natural resources.

Trapped in Place

Then there are people who are sufficiently exposed to climate impacts but who lack the wealth or other resources needed to adapt, including by moving. While migration can offer one solution, it is not available to all those suffering the effects of climate change, whether they lack the means or the opportunity. Even in its precarious forms, migration takes varying degrees of financial, human, and social capital, which not everyone has. In other words, some people in climate-vulnerable regions simply cannot “afford” to migrate. Thus, in contradiction to the widely circulated and highly politicized image of the impoverished climate refugee, it is not always the poorest and most vulnerable who move.

Such groups have come to be called “trapped populations”: people who need to move and want to move but cannot. The label can equally be applied in other crisis contexts such as conflict, health pandemics, or extreme poverty. Indeed, various crises often overlap and can exacerbate the forces keeping someone in place, but the term trapped populations has gained a particular foothold in research focused on climate and other forms of environmental change. Acknowledging these populations opens up a relatively new area of discussion on the climate-mobility nexus. An increasing number of studies seek to identify and understand trapped populations. As an alternative to the more prevalent focus on people who move at least in part because of negative impacts of climate change, researchers are now also asking who, when facing these same impacts, does not move and why.

A Vicious Cycle

Special Issue: Climate Change and Migration

This article is part of a special series about climate change and migration.

EXPLORE THE ISSUE

Climate change can both increase a person’s need to migrate and simultaneously inhibit their capability to do so. Demonstrating the non-linear relationship between climate and mobility, or what has been termed the immobility paradox, the world may actually be facing a future in which fewer people are able to move as a result of climate change because environmental changes can decrease the very resources needed to migrate. People’s normal mobility patterns can be disrupted by shifting climatic conditions or a sudden-onset event. For example, a farming household that regularly engages in seasonal migration to cities for off-season employment may no longer be able to do so because diminishing crop yields force them to redirect assets to meet their basic needs. In the case of severe drought, evidence from West Africa shows that households tend to allocate dwindling resources to basics such as food, water, and shelter rather than investing in migration.

Trapping Factors

By far, poverty is the most cited constraint on out-migration in studies of trapped populations. Accordingly, it is typically the poor who are left behind when environmental disasters and slow-onset change compel their neighbors to move. This holds true for individuals but also for places. In Zambia, for example, one study found that while wealthy districts showed a positive climate-migration relationship, poor districts were characterized by climate-related immobility.

People are not trapped, however, only by a lack of money or assets. Limited social networks outside one’s place of origin, for instance, can have a strong influence on the ability to migrate or evacuate. In the author’s work in the Mekong Delta of Vietnam, the absence of social contacts who might provide advice, accommodation, or job prospects in a potential destination had more of a trapping effect than the financial costs of the move itself. For others, physical barriers block mobility. In remote areas such as the Bartang Valley of Tajikistan, road closures caused by avalanches, snowfall, and river flooding can cut off rural residents and threaten food security.

In sudden disasters, people with disabilities and older people are more likely to become trapped because they often face greater issues accessing early warnings and emergency information, as well as reaching shelters. During the 2011 tsunami in Japan, many were unable to evacuate because the tsunami struck during the daytime, when most family members and neighbors were at work. As a consequence, the elderly and people with disabilities suffer disproportionately high mortality rates during disasters.

Gender, too, plays a role. In coastal Senegal, active, young male fishers often embark on international migration to fish in Mauritania, whereas land-based women who process and sell fish are more vulnerable to dwindling local fish stocks, plummeting biodiversity, and coastal erosion. One study in Bangladesh found that women were more likely to stay in place during cyclones because they feared for their safety in evacuation shelters and believed their role was to stay behind and look after cattle, furniture, and the household.

It is almost always an intersection of social inequities that contributes to involuntary immobility. This includes structural barriers such as legal or administrative rules, lack of transportation networks, and the absence of migration infrastructure, as well as household-level characteristics such as financial resources, social networks, and human capital; personal attributes such as age, education, and skills also are factors. After all, microlevel conditions such as household poverty are often produced—or at least reinforced—by macrolevel inequalities, structural opportunities, and constraints. During Hurricane Katrina in 2005, for instance, those left behind in New Orleans as waters rose were disproportionately Black, low-income, and lacked a car or social networks to secure shelter elsewhere. Many had no way to evacuate and no place to flee to, exposing systemic racial and socioeconomic disparities and blind spots in U.S. government emergency planning.

The Choice to Stay

While trapped populations are defined as people who want to move but cannot do so, there are people and communities who do not want to leave their home despite the risks. Many choose to stay in climate-vulnerable areas even when severe and irreversible environmental events occur. While it is impossible to know precisely how many non-migrants fall into this category, the phenomenon is being studied intensively.

Documentation of voluntary immobility in places such as the Pacific and West Africa highlights the importance of investigating people’s desires and willingness to move, rather than assuming them. The decision may be especially influenced by environmental changes, or it may be more profoundly shaped by other factors, such as attachment to a particular place, cultural ties, social status, gender roles, and kinship obligations. In the author’s work in Saint-Louis, Senegal, some people (especially those who were older), denied being trapped and explained that their poverty had nothing to do with their immobility. “This is the land of my grandparents,” said a 61-year-old fisherman. “Even if I had billions,” he said he would not leave.

In the face of extreme and irreversible climate change, many communities are actively resisting migration and relocation across the Pacific Islands, where rising seas have threatened to subsume entire countries. Community leaders in places such as Kiribati and Tuvalu have voiced their intentions to stay in their lands for cultural, spiritual, and political reasons, fully aware of the negative health and livelihood impacts they face as the waters rise. In these islands, as in other climate-impacted regions, there are those who prefer to die rather than leave.

However, immobility does not necessarily mean stasis. Some people who do not migrate may still engage in everyday mobilities in response to climate change, including commuting for their job or engaging in circular migration. Thus, it is important to recognize that non-migration does not necessarily mean the absence of movement. This perspective also underscores that non-migrating populations are not necessarily victims of circumstance, but rather people engaging in complex behaviors based on an array of factors.

Policy Decisions: The Option to Stay or Go

The people who do not move—or who get stuck in place after an initial migration—may be equally or even more vulnerable than their migrant counterparts. Those who are unable to pre-emptively migrate in a safe, orderly, and regular fashion may end up displaced as environmental impacts worsen. Or they may pay the ultimate price. In Sri Lanka, a study conducted in 13 evacuation camps showed that women and children died at disproportionate rates because they were located indoors and at home on the morning of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. In 2021, 12 people with disabilities living in a group home drowned in floods in Sinzig, Germany because they did not evacuate in time. From a policy perspective, therefore, identifying the existence of trapped populations and addressing the root causes of immobility is critical for targeted interventions designed to anticipate and prevent large-scale humanitarian crises.

While there are discussions at the international level around ways governments can avert, minimize, and address forced migration under climate change, policies directly targeting immobility are rare. Often policymakers assume that, if given a choice, most people confronted with climate change will choose to stay in place. This thinking normalizes immobility and, in turn, crafts climate-related migration as a problem to be solved, rather than a possibly beneficial phenomenon. Policy messages seem intent on stopping or at least inhibiting migration through mitigation efforts (such as by lowering greenhouse gas emissions) and adaptation measures (which seek to minimize adverse impacts of climate change). Largely through these two policy options, policymakers seem to think the immobile ideal can be achieved.

Migration policy arguably always has an immobility component, with the power to halt movement just as much as to facilitate it. For trapped populations, policies and programs that enable people to leave climate-vulnerable regions offer pathways forward. These include existing migration mechanisms, such as bilateral circular migration schemes, or vocational and educational training that helps people access opportunities and services in their destinations. An oft-cited example of the latter is the previous Migration with Dignity program in Kiribati, a small Pacific Island facing sea-level rise, which sought to prepare migrants to prosper abroad through educational and vocational support.

Regional mechanisms allowing for free movement protocols that acknowledge the environment-migration relationship can also help facilitate mobility by diminishing legal and political barriers to international migration. The Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) in Eastern Africa, a region highly vulnerable to climate change, has developed the IGAD Protocol on Transhumance which allows for the free, safe, and orderly cross-border mobility of livestock and herders as an adaptation mechanism to climate change. Its Protocol on Free Movement of Persons also recognizes that climate change and environmental degradation are important drivers of displacement and that the free movement of persons in the region can mitigate these impacts.

Planned relocation schemes moving people away from vulnerable areas also potentially provide solutions for those wanting to leave, although they tend to be internal rather than international and vary in terms of successful outcomes. As part of its Migration with Dignity program, Kiribati purchased land in Fiji with the expectation of gradual voluntary relocation, though this plan has since been abandoned. Fiji, for its part, has spent several years trying to relocate particularly at-risk villages on some of its more than 300 islands.

People who choose to stay in areas where habitability is eroding and that have been hit by repeated disasters or progressively worsening conditions may be more elusive policy targets. These people are unlikely to spontaneously take advantage of free movement protocols, bilateral agreements, or other internal facilitative actions such as planned relocation. Regarding the latter, planned relocation is complex, costly, and time-consuming, and if people do not consider themselves trapped or are unaware of the risks, they may be unwilling to engage in programs designed to help them leave. If their concerns are not thoroughly appreciated and addressed, planned relocation programs are likely to stall or fail. In Isle de Jean Charles in Louisiana, diverging visions between Indigenous residents and state officials delayed the efforts to relocate residents away from the island’s coastal erosion for several years. Elsewhere, plagued by poor communication, planning, and implementation, as many as 30 percent of relocated households returned to the floodplains of the Zambezi River Valley in Mozambique.

Other policies might not include convincing populations to resettle elsewhere, but rather target adaptation in situ and therefore help people to remain in more sustainable conditions. Climate adaptation programs already exist that can develop smart agriculture and fishing techniques locally, for example, and can be paired with broader development initiatives such as infrastructure, education, and diversifying local livelihoods.

Promoting the right to stay and the right to move should ultimately be seen as complementary rather than competing policy objectives. Initiatives that focus on fostering connectivity between destinations and areas of origin can also make it easier for people to circulate, return, and generally stay connected to their loved ones, which may make both staying and going more appealing and more tenable. Ultimately, policy will succeed insofar as it gives the people most affected by climate change the power and choice over when and how they migrate—if they migrate at all.

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Rights group reports rise in abuses, hate speech against migrants in Libya

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A Libyan human rights organization has raised alarm over what it describes as a sharp increase in violations against migrants, refugees, asylum seekers, and foreign workers across Libya since the beginning of June 2026.

In a statement released this week, Libya Crimes Watch (LCW) said it has documented widespread arrests, raids on migrant residences, forced evictions, and physical and verbal assaults in both eastern and western parts of the country. The group also reported a surge in hate speech and incitement to violence targeting migrant communities.

According to LCW, its field teams have monitored large-scale arrest campaigns in several cities, including Tripoli, Benghazi, Ajdabiya, and Al-Bayda. Those detained reportedly include women and children. The organization said it has also documented incidents in which migrants were forcibly removed from their homes and subjected to abuse, including individuals with existing health conditions.

LCW alleged that the operations are being carried out by security agencies and armed groups affiliated with authorities in both eastern and western Libya. The group named the Libyan Arab Armed Forces (LAAF), the Directorate for Combatting Illegal Migration (DCIM), and the General Directorate of Security Operations (GDSO), among others, as entities involved in the campaigns.

The organization further expressed concern over what it described as the involvement of civilians in some raids and assaults. It also cited widespread anti-migrant rhetoric on social media and in local media outlets, including platforms it said are aligned with authorities and official institutions. According to LCW, such messaging has contributed to increased hostility toward migrants and encouraged participation in actions targeting them.

One Sudanese migrant, identified by the pseudonym “Inas” for security reasons, recounted an alleged attack on her family. She told LCW that armed men entered their home, assaulted family members, used racist language, and forced them from the property before stealing their belongings.

“We are now on the street with nowhere to go,” she said, according to the statement. “We have a sick family member who needs care, and we have found no organization to help or protect us.”

LCW said Libyan authorities in both the east and west bear legal responsibility for protecting migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers and ensuring respect for their rights under international human rights law. The organization called for an immediate end to abuses, protection against violence and forced evictions, and a halt to deportations or forced returns that could expose individuals to persecution or other harm.

The group also urged the Office of the Libyan Attorney General to stop detaining people solely on the basis of their migration or asylum status and to investigate all reported violations. LCW called for those responsible for abuses, including individuals who ordered, participated in, or facilitated them, to be held accountable through fair and independent legal proceedings.

In addition, the organization appealed to international bodies, including the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL), the International Organization for Migration (IOM), and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), to take urgent measures to protect migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers at risk in Libya.

The allegations have not been independently verified, and Libyan authorities had not publicly responded to the claims at the time of the statement’s release.

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Neglect deepens as DRC appears on NRC’s list of top neglected displacement for 10 years

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The Democratic Republic of Congo has appeared on the Norwegian Refugee Council’s (NRC) annual list of top neglected displacement crises, for the tenth year running, and the neglect is deepening.

“This is a testament to the world’s failure to respond to crises that are not regarded as strategically important for rich countries,” said NRC’s Secretary General Jan Egeland. “Millions of people are being abandoned because we have chosen not to act, not because we cannot. The uncomfortable truth is that this neglect is a choice, and something we can choose to end.”

In 2025, just 27.4 per cent of the funding required to respond to the crisis in DR Congo was provided, the lowest rate in 10 years, leaving over 21 million people in need with no or drastically reduced assistance. A decade ago, the international community was providing 55 US dollars per person in need in DR Congo. Today that figure has collapsed to under 33 US dollars.

Countries such as Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Mali and Nigeria have all featured on the list six or more times, pointing to a systemic pattern of deliberate neglect rather than isolated failure.

“Donor governments have been presented with evidence of neglect, year after year. Yet those in power still choose to prioritise military and strategic investments and underfund, deprioritise and sideline the victims of these crises. It is a failure of our humanity,” said Egeland.

The report is the tenth edition of NRC’s Neglected Displacement Crises Report, tracking how responses continue to fall short of the scale of suffering.

Sudan tops the list

The 10 most neglected crises for 2025 are Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Colombia, Yemen, Afghanistan, Honduras, Ecuador, Cameroon, Nigeria and Mozambique, spanning three continents and tens of millions of people the world continues to ignore.

The Neglected Displacement Crises Report assesses each crisis across four indicators: media coverage, funding, political attention, and scale of displacement. A lower score indicates a larger gap between the scale of human suffering and the adequacy of international response.

Sudan tops this year’s list. More than 9 million people are internally displaced, and up to 4 million have fled to neighbouring countries. Nearly 19.5 million people inside Sudan are facing hunger, yet the international response remains wholly inadequate to that scale of suffering.

“It is incomprehensible that a displacement crisis of similar proportions to the crises in Syria and Ukraine at their peak can continue to worsen almost unnoticed,” Egeland said. “Just as needs in Sudan skyrocketed last year and famine kept spreading, the funding was cut. Many displaced people receive no international support and are left to beg for assistance from other displaced people who no longer have anything more to share.”

A decade of the same pattern

Since NRC began publishing this report 10 years ago, 27 crises across four continents have appeared on the list, and the pattern is unambiguous. The African continent features the most consistently. From the Sahel region to the Horn of Africa, from the Great Lakes to West Africa, many of these are cases of prolonged or repeated displacement. Across the board, neglect coincides with access restrictions for humanitarians. With rare exceptions, the crises that were ignored a decade ago are still being ignored today. In DR Congo, the Ebola outbreak now spreading across eastern parts of the country — declared a public health emergency of international concern by WHO in May 2026 — is unfolding in communities already devastated by years of displacement and humanitarian neglect.

“Behind every statistic in eastern DR Congo are families who have endured years of violence, repeated displacement, and deep uncertainty about their future,” said Eric Batonon, NRC’s country director in the Democratic Republic of Congo. “While attention shifts from one global emergency to another, millions of Congolese continue to live without adequate protection, assistance, or hope. The fact that DR Congo remains among the world’s most neglected crises for the tenth consecutive year should serve as a wake-up call to the international community.”

What NRC is calling for

The gap between needs and available humanitarian funding is increasing as a result of brutal humanitarian funding cuts. This is affecting the neglected crises particularly hard, as these crises are already characterised by less available funding per person in need.

NRC urges donor governments to fund crises based on humanitarian need and scale of displacement, not geopolitical interest. It calls on political leaders and diplomats to engage seriously with the root causes of protracted displacement, many of which persist precisely because they are seen as having little geopolitical importance. It also calls on media organisations to report on these crises with the consistency and depth they demand as ongoing emergencies.

“The crises ignored today will demand a larger, costlier and more complex response tomorrow,” said Egeland. “The world does not lack for skills nor resources. Be it arranging football World Cups, or pioneering space exploration: our ability to organise and overcome challenges is almost without limit. We can and must finally take the decision to end the neglect that has caused such deep suffering for millions of people”.

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Ebola: Border closures alone risk driving movement underground and increasing transmission risks

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Health screening at Arua Airport in Uganda supported by IOM to support Ebola health surveillance and enhance early detection in the country. Photo Credit IOM/2026
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The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has urged governments and partners to strengthen urgently cross-border coordination to contain the ongoing Bundibugyo virus disease (Ebola) outbreak, warning that border closures alone risk driving movement underground and increasing transmission risks.

Latest World Health Organization (WHO) figures show 116 suspected cases, 321 confirmed cases, 48 deaths, and six recovered cases in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). In Uganda, there have been nine confirmed cases, and one death to date.

“Viruses do not stop at borders, and neither should our response,” said Ugochi Daniels, IOM Deputy Director General for Operations. “When borders close, people often continue moving through informal routes where health screening and surveillance are limited. The most effective response is coordinated action that keeps mobility visible, safe and monitored.”

IOM warns that reactive border closures can reduce visibility of population movements, undermining health screening, surveillance, contact tracing and early detection efforts. Evidence from previous health emergencies shows that movement restrictions do not stop mobility but often redirect it towards informal and less-monitored routes.

This is the 17th Ebola outbreak recorded in the DRC and the third largest on record, highlighting both the recurring nature of the disease and the importance of sustained preparedness.

The outbreak is unfolding in one of the world’s most complex humanitarian contexts. Eastern DRC is already affected by conflict and large-scale displacement. As of March 2026, 3.6 million people have been internally displaced in the country, including nearly 922,000 displaced in Ituri Province alone, where the outbreak is centred.

The confirmation of cross-border transmission between DRC and Uganda further highlights the urgency of coordinated regional action, particularly in areas where daily cross-border movement is essential for trade, livelihoods and access to basic services.

Data from IOM’s Flow Monitoring Registry at key formal and informal crossing points—including Cyanika, Busunga, Bunagana, Mpondwe, Goli, Vurra, Busanza and Ntoroko—shows that cross-border mobility continues despite restrictions, including through informal routes, reinforcing the need for data-driven and coordinated response measures.

People living in displacement sites, border communities and conflict-affected areas face heightened vulnerability due to limited access to healthcare, clean water and other essential services, increasing the risk of undetected transmission.

IOM is supporting governments and partners in DRC, Uganda and neighbouring countries by strengthening border health operations, population mobility mapping, disease surveillance, risk communication and community engagement in high-mobility areas.

Understanding where, why and how people move remains critical to preventing further spread. Public health measures must be informed by mobility patterns and coordinated across borders to ensure effective containment while avoiding unintended consequences that push movement out of sight.

Significant funding gaps continue to constrain the scale and speed of response efforts, including preparedness activities across the region. 

IOM welcomes the swift financial contribution from the United States, which is helping to strengthen frontline response efforts and save lives. Close coordination with the African Union, Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, WHO and United Nations partners remains essential to containing the outbreak.

While Ebola is a preventable and containable disease, additional resources are urgently needed to sustain surveillance systems, maintain border health operations, strengthen community-based prevention efforts and expand support in displacement settings.

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