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Returning Home? Conditions in Syria, Not Lebanon, Drive the Return Intentions of Syrian Refugees

Type
Dépliant/brochure
Pays
Liban, République arabe syrienne
Région
Moyen-Orient et Afrique du Nord
Organisation
Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA)
Année
2020
Publication Series
Peace & Recovery Policy Brief
Auteur
A. Alrababa'h; D. Masterson; M. Casalis; D. Hangartner; J. Weinstein; N. Yassin

As of September 2020, the Syrian government had retaken control of the majority of Syria, leading to speculation about the end of the country’s civil war and sparking debates both within the region and beyond about whether Syrian refugees will return. While some regional governments have begun to take active steps to encourage such return, many in the international community believe that conditions in Syria remain unsuitable for return. Still, some have started to consider steps to aid refugees with going back. 

Absent in these discussions though is the voice of Syrian refugees. Do refugees want to go back to Syria? And if so, when and how? What are the conditions that predict the return of refugees? With support from IPA’s Peace & Recovery Program, researchers from the Immigration Policy Lab (IPL) conducted a representative survey of 3,000 Syrian refugees in Lebanon from August-October 2019 to learn about their return intentions.