FORUM: Celebrate International Asteroid Day 2021 with NASA and The Asteroid Foundation
Wednesday, 30 June 2021
International Asteroids Day 2021; June 30th
Tuesday, 29 June 2021
International Day of Parliamentarism 2021; June 27
FORUM: "Say Yes to Youth in Parliaments." International Day of Parliamentarism 2021;
MUSICAL PERFORMANCE
Virtual Concert in Celebration of International Day of Parliamentarism 2021;
Empowering Youth IN A TIME OF PANDEMIC
VIRTUAL GLOBAL LAUNCH:
Wednesday, 30 June 2021
9:00am EST (New York time)
Watch the performance: United Nations
UN Global YouTube: http://youtube.com/unitednations
UN WebTV: http://webtv.un.org/
In celebration of International Day of Parliamentarism on 30 June 2021, the UN Chamber Music Society of the United Nations Staff Recreation Council (UNCMS) – in partnership with the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) - will perform a concert in celebration and recognition of the role of parliaments in national plans in empowering youth who have been coping during the pandemic – ensuring access to education, addressing reduced employment prospects, social isolation, and the surge in mental health issues.
The concert will be launched on the UN platforms, and shared by the Member Parliaments, along with the other debates and discussions of the parliament held on the International Day of Parliamentarism.
Established in 30 June 1889, the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU), the world organization of parliaments, connects national parliaments in order to promote greater transparency, accountability and participation at the global level. Along with other parliamentary organizations, IPU engages with the United Nations on activities that cover a broad range of issues, including peace and security, human rights and sustainable development.
The music programme will feature musical works that represent an artistic tapestry of human experience, to provoke empathy and create a more interconnected world. Founded in 2016 by Brenda Vongova, the UN Chamber Music Society is dedicated to promoting the UN goals at large - through the universal language of music.
PROGRAMME
Opening Messages
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SPECIAL THANKS
UN Department of Global Communications
Sven Spengemann, MP
Joel Sheakoski, Video Editor
For more information:
https://www.ipu.org/event/empowering-youth-in-time-pandemic-un-chamber-music-society-virtual-concert
Monday, 28 June 2021
International Day of the Tropics 2021; June 29th
People across the globe are more connected than ever. Digital technologies, mobile phones, the internet and other forms of digital information exchange have changed the way business and education are conducted and how knowledge is shared. Information and communication technology (ICT) refers to any technology that enables the communication and electronic capture, processing and transmission of information. This includes older technologies such as radio, television and fixed line telephony, as well as more recent innovations such as personal computers, mobile phones, broadband networks and the internet. The potential of these new technologies lies in their capacity to instantaneously connect vast networks of individuals, organisations and governments, across all corners of the world. ICT can provide many opportunities for education, entrepreneurship and new modes of finance and banking, and play a role in reducing corruption.
In 2020, the global COVID-19 pandemic brought focused attention to the reality that digital inequality persists around the world, even in countries with high-speed connectivity infrastructure. Most countries around the world issued home quarantine measures in the first half of 2020 and workers, families and individuals relied on mobile phones and internet connectivity to continue to work, learn and communicate. For those without access to digital technologies, gaps in access and digital skills can increase societal fractures and undermine recovery.
Mobile Phones and the Internet
Globally, it appears mobile phone ownership is now universal, with subscriptions out numbering people. In 2019 there were 108 mobile phone subscriptions for every 100 people globally. This equates to some 8.7 billion active mobile cellular subscriptions.
In the Tropics, access to mobile phones has increased dramatically since the turn of the century but still trails the rest of the world. In 2000, there were fewer than 5 mobile phones per 100 people in the Tropics. By 2019, this number had grown to more than 97.
According to the latest available estimates from the ITU, in 2019, 53.5% of people worldwide used the internet in 2019, an increase from just 17% in 2005.
In 2019, estimates suggest just 37.1% of people used the internet in the Tropics – indicating that the gap between the Tropics and the rest of the world has actually widened since previous State of the Tropics reports.
Mobile Broadband
Recent advances in mobile technology have allowed more people to access the internet through the use of internet enabled mobile devices, particularly smartphones. This has allowed far more people access to the internet without ever having to be connected by a fixed line. However, access the to the internet through mobile broadband remains low in many parts if the Tropics
The groups of people who have access to and use the internet vary between regions, gender and age. People living in urban areas are more likely to use the internet, men are more likely than women and young people are more likely than the elderly There is no doubt that access to mobile phones and the internet has changed and continues to change how we communicate, work, do business, learn, and interact with culture and art. During the various stages of lockdown imposed across the world in 2020, these forms of communication became more important than ever.
Education and Digital Literacy
Lack of access to ICT at school and at home limits the ability of students to learn digital skills which would allow them to participate in the global digital economy which many see as essential for ongoing sustainable development
There is huge variation in schools with internet access, from less than three percent in Madagascar and Burkina Faso to 100% in Brunei, Maldives and a number of Caribbean states. Access tends to remain very low across Central and Southern Africa, and in some parts of South Asia, South East Asia and Central America. Data are not available for any countries in Oceania.
It is clear that some regions of the Tropics lag global estimates considerably. Africa and South Asia have particularly low levels of internet access at home. The youngest group, school aged children, had the lowest levels of access in these regions, with slightly higher access in East Asia and the Pacific.
In the context of the global pandemic with many schools operating remotely, this low level of access in many tropical countries meant that when schools were closed, the only means of students continuing schooling was through take home packages – this has resulted simply in many students not accessing schooling at all with potentially huge social and economic costs to the countries that can bear it the least.
Trade of ICT.
Around 40% of all ICT goods are exported from tropical regions. These exports are dominated by South East Asia and Central America. In other regions of the Tropics, the share of the global trade in ICT goods remains small.
South East Asia is the only region in the Tropics that is a net exporter of ICT goods. All other regions in the tropics import more technology than they produce and export.
E-Commerce and E-Waste.
Globally almost one quarter of all people used the internet to make a purchase in 2019, however this was concentrated in wealthy countries in North America, Europe and East Asia. Far fewer people use to the internet for purchasing throughout the Tropics with some exceptions such as Saudi Arabia, Malaysia and Singapore. The largest growth markets in the Tropics have been Hong Kong and India.
The rapid expansion of electrical and electronic equipment manufacturing across the world due to industrialization, economic expansion, technological development and growing wealth has led to complementary growth in electronic waste or E-waste.
On a per capita basis, tropical countries, with the exception of tropical Australia and USA (Hawaii), produce far less E-waste than nations in North America and Europe. E waste from North America and Europe is often exported to China, Brazil, Nigeria, Ghana and India.
Case Studies
Information and Communication Technology in the Pacific takes a closer look at the tropical region with the least connectivity. Mobile phone penetration is around half the global rate and in 2019, internet users represented less than 20% of the population outside of Australia and Hawaii. Nations in the Pacific are generally small, culturally diverse and separated by challenging terrain or vast ocean. Although submarine cables now connect most of the capital cities in this region, outer islands and remote areas remain unconnected.
Digital Health in the Tropics explores the potential benefits of building better digital health systems in the Tropics. Digital health programs can improve vaccination rates, monitor diseases and symptoms, detect disease outbreaks and connect specialist medicine to those who are unable to travel to urban centres. Although privacy and reliability issues remain, digital health has the capacity to enhance existing health systems.
Mobile money and the story of M-pesa charts the rise of mobile money throughout the tropics with a focus on M-pesa, the most successful service. Mobile money is a money transfer system that uses mobile phones and network of human agents who cash in and cash out for customers, exchanging e-money as text messages for hard currency. It does not require a smart phone, bank account, credit card or internet connection. Mobile money accounts can provide a gateway to life enhancing services such as remittances, health care, education, employment and social protections.
Cobalt mining in the DRC discusses the origin of a key component in digital systems and lithium ion batteries, cobalt. The enormous and growing demand for digital devices and products globally has driven huge growth in mining for critical minerals used in components.
The vast majority of cobalt is mined in the Democratic Republic of Congo where it has been shown to create jobs, alleviate poverty and encourage investment in social infrastructure. However, working conditions are often dangerous, miners are poorly paid and, in some cases, child labour is involved.
Saturday, 26 June 2021
Micro-, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises Day 2021; June 27th
The United Nations General Assembly designated 27 June as Micro-, Small and Medium-sized Enterprises Day (A/RES/71/279) in order to raise awareness of the contribution that small businesses make to sustainable, inclusive and resilient economic growth and, shared prosperity and decent work for all. Micro-, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs) account for 90% of businesses, 60-70% of employment, and 50% of GDP worldwide.
On MSME Day 2021, almost 18 months after the onset of the COVID-19 crisis, most countries will still be grappling with the pandemic and its severe health and socio-economic impacts, including lockdowns and the need to support those who have lost their jobs and livelihoods. In many parts of the world, the pandemic recovery efforts are being presented as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to “rebuild better”, particularly by prioritizing sustainability, resilience and inclusiveness. This virtual MSME Day event will explore how to ensure MSMEs – the bedrock of our societies - are equipped to ensure a fast, equitable and sustainable post-COVID-19 recovery, empowered to drive the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and supported to spur innovation, creativity and decent work for all.
The global context
The COVID-19 crisis has taught us that the pandemic and containment measures do not impact everyone in the same way. Among the private sector, MSMEs, especially those led by women, youth, ethnic minorities and migrants, suffered the most. An International Trade Centre survey on COVID-19 impact among businesses in 136 countries has shown that nearly 62% of women-led small businesses have been strongly affected by the crisis, compared to just over half of firms led by men, and women-owned are 27% more likely not to survive the pandemic. The COVID-19 crisis also taught us the value and catalytic impact of digital connectivity, particularly for MSMEs.
As governments vaccinate their populations, the world continues to deal with several other challenges that include the ongoing effects of climate change, biodiversity lost, and pollution. If unabated, these three crises are expected to have severe negative implications for economic growth, human health and ecosystems, employment and livelihoods. Much like the pandemic, we know that without concerted global actions, climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution are likely to disrupt growth, undermine food and nutrition security, and reinforce inequalities within and among countries. Among African MSMEs, only 27% of women-led firms reported investing in at least one measure to reduce exposure to environmental risks, while 45% of men-led firms had done the same, according to the SME Competitiveness Outlook 2021. Similarly, smaller and youth-led firms were less likely to make environmental investments compared with larger and adult-led firms. These smaller, women- and youth-led businesses have less capital at their disposal to invest in mitigating measures to prepare for external shocks like a pandemic or climate event.
In order to recover better, efforts and stimulus packages must target those most heavily affected by the pandemic and be aligned with the SDGs and Paris Agreement; supporting MSMEs, especially women, youth, migrants-owned, to be resilient to future shocks. We must seize the opportunity offered by the pandemic to address pre-existing biases and constraints faced by these women and men entrepreneurs and empower them to be the agent of change to achieve the SDGs. Focusing on stories from small business entrepreneurs, including women-led firms and ‘ecopreneurs’, this event will shed light on challenges they face, showcase solutions, and identify new approaches needed to ensure that MSMEs are change agents in driving a sustainable and inclusive recovery.
Theme
This MSME Day 2021 virtual event will focus on placing MSMEs at the centre of resilient, inclusive and sustainable recovery and growth. Achieving the SDGs, and an economy that is greener and fairer, requires resilient and flourishing MSMEs everywhere.
The event and social media campaign will feature small business entrepreneurs, including women and youth led firms and “ecopreneurs” alongside global leaders to address barriers, showcase best practices and identify big ideas with MSMEs at the centre of achieving the SDGs.
Objectives
- Strengthen awareness and capacities of policymakers and micro-, small and medium-sized enterprises in achieving fairer, resilient and sustainable recovery that contributes to achieving the SDGs.
- Contribute to global debates on MSMEs in the post-pandemic recovery, including through environmental sustainability, and empowerment of youth, women, migrants and refugees.
- Create space for action, recommendations and practical tools that lead to more targeted policies and measures, including stimulus packages, supportive ecosystems and opportunities for MSMEs, especially women and youth owned MSMEs and sustainable MSMEs.
All countries; UN entities; Other international organizations; Business support organizations
Private sector representatives; Academic institutions.
International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking 2021; June 26th
FORUM:''SHARE FACTS ON DRUGS, SAVE LIVES'' International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking 2021
“Share Facts On Drugs, Save Lives”
The International Day against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, or World Drug Day, is marked on 26 June every year, to strengthen action and cooperation in achieving the goal of a world free of drug abuse.
And each year, individuals like yourself, entire communities, and various organizations all over the world join in on this global observance, to raise awareness of the major problem that illicit drugs represent for society.
Together, we can tackle the world drug problem!
What Can You Do?
All you have to do is #ShareFactsOnDrugs to help #SaveLives.
Do your part and combat misinformation by sharing the real facts on drugs — from health risks and solutions to tackle the world drug problem, to evidence-based prevention, treatment, and care.
1) Know the facts
2) Only share information from verified sources, like UNODC
And you can start now. Get engaged by sharing the right facts on drugs right from our Twitter and Facebook channels.
You can also access and share our social media resources and support us in promoting the facts on drugs.
What UNODC Does?
Every year, UNODC issues the World Drug Report, full of key statistics and factual data obtained through official sources, a science-based approach and research.
UNODC continues to provide facts and practical solutions to address the current world drug problem, and remains committed to attaining a vision of health for all based on science.
COVID-19 has brought unprecedented public awareness on health, protective measures for staying healthy, and most importantly, and on protecting each other. A growing sense of global community and solidarity continues to emerge, as does the need to ensure health care for all.
World Drug Day is a day to share research findings, evidence-based data and life-saving facts, and to continue tapping into a shared spirit of solidarity.
UNODC invites everyone to do their part, by taking a firm stance against misinformation and unreliable sources; while committing to sharing only the real science-backed data on drugs and save lives.
By working together, we can tackle the world drug problem.STATEMENTS
UNODC Executive Director's statement on International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking 2021
REPORT
UNODC World Drug Report 2021: pandemic effects ramp up drug risks, as youth underestimate cannabis dangers
Global launch of the 2021 World Drug Report
International Day in Support of Victims of Torture 2021; June 26th
Marking the 40th Anniversary of the UN Volntary Fund for Victims of Torture.
26 June is an opportunity to call on all stakeholders including UN Member States, civil society and individuals everywhere to unite in support of the hundreds of thousands of people around the world who have been victims of torture and those who are still tortured today.To witness how rehabilitation services help torture survivors to heal, watch the UN Torture Fund trailer, featuring interviews with beneficiary organizations, survivors and trustees.
FORUM: FOSTERING CIVIC SPACE TO OBTAIN REDRESS AND ACCOUNTABILITY FOR VICTIMS OF TORTURE.
In commemoration of International Day in Support of Victims of Torture 40th anniversary of the UN Voluntary Fund for Victims of Torture, 26 June 2021
Moderator
Juan E. Mendez, Professor of Human Rights Law in Residence, American University, Washington College of Law and member, Board of Trustees, UN Voluntary Fund for Victims of Torture.
Speakers
UN:
Ilze Brands Kehris, UN Assistant Secretary-General and focal point on reprisals
Claude Heller, Chairperson, UN Committee against Torture
Suzanne Jabbour, Chairperson, UN Subcommittee on Prevention of Torture
Nils Melzer, UN Special Rapporteur on Torture
Vivienne Nathanson, Chairperson, UN Voluntary Fund for Victims of Torture
Civil Society:
Lucille Abeykoon, Coordinator, Human Rights Office Kandy (Sri Lanka)
Victor Mhango, Director, Centre for Human Rights Education Advice and Assistance (Malawi)
Elçin Türkdoğan, Programmes Coordinator, Human Rights Foundation of Turkey (Turkey)
Norberto Liwski, President, Comité para la Defensa de la Salud, la Etica y los Derechos Humanos (Argentina)
With the support of
The Group of Friends of the UN Voluntary Fund for Victims of Torture (Argentina, Austria, Chile, Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Georgia, Ireland, Italy, Lichtenstein, Luxemburg, Mexico, Norway, Peru, Switzerland and the United States of America)
H.E. Mr. Morten Jespersen, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Denmark to the UN in Geneva, Co-Chair of the Group of Friends
Wednesday, 23 June 2021
International Widows' Day 2021; June 23rd
FORUM: "Lets commit to making sure all widows occupy a respected place in our societies" International Widows' Day 2021
Webinar series on widows empowerment.
Statement by the United Nations Secretary General on International Widows' Day 2021; June 23rd.
For many widows, losing their husband also means losing identity, land rights, property, income, and possibly their children. Their physical safety is at greater risk, just when they may be suffering serious emotional trauma.
Human rights, including the right to inherit and own property, should not be contingent on marital status. Inheritance laws and social safety nets should ensure that widows are protected and secure.
The COVID-19 pandemic has both increased the number of widows globally and exacerbated many of the challenges they face, including access to bank accounts and pensions. As governments provide economic and social support in response to the pandemic, they must consider the world’s 250 million widows. Even before the pandemic hit, nearly one in ten widows lived in extreme poverty.
Social assistance, including cash transfers and pensions, can help support widows who are often left to take full responsibility for their families. Governments should make special efforts to ensure these measures reach women with low visibility, for example, those without identity cards or bank accounts.
I urge every country, as a critical element of my Call to Action on Human Rights, to pass and implement legislation and policies that promote gender equality, and to repeal all discriminatory laws that perpetuate women’s subjugation and exclusion. The persecution and disinheritance of widows, by law and custom, is one of the worst examples of gender discrimination.
On International Widows’ Day, let’s commit to making sure all widows occupy a respected place in our societies, with access to legal and social protection, so they can live their lives in peace and reach their full potential.
United Nations Public Service Day 2021; June 23
Innovating the Future Public Service;
New Government Models for a New Era to Reach the SDGs
- 23 June 2021 (9:00 – 10:30am EDT)
Statement by the United Nations Secretary-General on Public Service Day 2021, June 23rd
Background and Context
United Nations Public Service Day, celebrated on 23 June each year, recognizes the value and virtue of public service to the community; highlights the contribution of public service in the development process; recognizes the work of public servants, and encourages young people to pursue careers in the public sector.
Innovating for a new era: Leveraging the role of technology for the future public service.
The last decade brought about a digital revolution that changed the way we live, work, and govern. Technology and data driven innovations have increased the pace of our daily life, opened up information and elevated civil society voices and changed how we solve problems, design policy and deliver services. In parallel, governments find themselves under resource pressures and increasing public demands, having to do much more, with less. The 2020 Covid-19 pandemic was a force multiplier to these trends, introducing remote work in government, digital service delivery, virtual service teams, and even new portfolios.
Today, every country in the world needs to re-think the structure and operating model of its civil service as we enter the third decade of the 21st century. The next era will see fundamental changes in how public servants, are hired, trained, and retained. We will see more technology being leveraged to make better decisions, monitor performance, and deliver service, and there will be a need for the private sector, and wider society, to play a bigger role in all aspect of creating public value. The future public service needs to be more agile, tech-savvy, data-driven, and human-centric. These are core elements to build future readiness, ensure inclusive policies and responsive services, to reduce inequalities and to raise trust in government.
Celebrating the 2021 United Nations Public Service Day: A virtual Event
In this context, to celebrate the 2021 United Nations Public Service Day, the Division of Public Institutions and Digital Government of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, in collaboration with the government of the United Arab Emirates hosted a 1.5-hour virtual event on the 23 June under the theme of “Innovating the Future Public Service: New Government Models for a New Era to Reach the SDGs”. The event brought together key stakeholders, public servants and UN officials to honor the work of public servants.
List of confirmed speakers,
Moderator: Ms. Jelena Lagger, Management and Policy researcher University of Bath (UK) and Vice President of CAFRAD’s International Advisory Committee (confirmed)
- Mr. Liu Zhenmin, United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs
- H.E. Ms. Ohood Khalfan Al Roumi, Minister of State for Government Development and the Future, United Arab Emirates
- H.E. Hamad Obaid Al Mansoori, Director General, Head of the UAE Digital Government and Director General of the Telecommunications and Digital Government Regulatory Authority), UAE
- Ms. Bernadette Lewis, Secretary-General of the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation
- Hon. Emma Theofelus, Deputy Information and Technology Minister, Namibia
- Dr. Julia Glidden, Microsoft Corporate Vice President, Worldwide Public Sector
- H.E. Eng. Majed Sultan Al Mesmar, Deputy Director General for Telecommunications Sector at the Telecommunications and Digital Government Regulatory Authority (TDRA), UAE
- Ms. Nele Leosk, Ambassador-at-Large for Digital Affairs at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Estonia
Objective of the event
The event highlighted and discussed the increasingly centric role that innovation and technology play in the delivery of public services and in doing so, examined how to better prepare the future public service for a new era, so as to reach the 2030 sustainable development goals. It examined the various approaches countries are taking to equip public servants with the skills necessary to be effective, responsive and relevant in the digital age. It also highlighted lessons learned from the past year, as many countries and public servants have been thrust into the digital era, quickly adopting, innovating and using online mechanisms to continue their work during the pandemic.
Supporting documents
Concept note and Agenda
Monday, 21 June 2021
International Day of Yoga 2021, June 21st
FORUM: "YOGA FOR WELL-BEING'', International Day of Yoga 2021.
The Year Long Yoga Calendar presents Yoga Events of different yoga institutions in one place. This Yoga-inspired calendar will help citizens to make yoga a part of their routine and keep their body healthy and mind calm. The Events Calendar lists both offline and online yoga and yoga-related events. The events are available on a daily, weekly, monthly and yearly basis.
Recognizing the important role of Yoga, this year’s commemoration of the 7th International Day of Yoga will be focused on “Yoga for well-being”, i.e. how practice of Yoga can promote holistic health of every individual.
International Day of Yoga 2021 - Programme.
PLEDGE: I PLEDGE TO MAKE YOGA AN INTEGRAL PART OF MY DAILY LIFE.
Yoga is a trend that has been flourishing from the years; rather this has become a trendsetter in maintaining both physical and mental well-being. Each Yogic activity is a key to improving flexibility, strength, balance and attaining harmony. Yoga Portal is a platform to help people embrace, practice and enjoy yoga every day. It is a perfect gateway to search for the best yoga resources, common yoga protocol training videos and the latest yoga events to take part in.Saturday, 19 June 2021
World Refugee Day 2021; June 20th
FORUM: 'TOGETHER WE CAN ACHIVE EVERYTHING" World Refugee Day 2021.
Measuring the socio-economic fallout of COVID-19 on displaced populations.
COVID-19 exposed the lack of timely, robust and operationally relevant data on household socioeconomic welfare for most countries – and the need for a way to collect these in the new environment created by the pandemic. In response, soon after the onset of the pandemic, the World Bank launched an ambitious initiative to collect nationally representative socio-economic data using high-frequency monitoring surveys using mobile phones. In turn, the World Bank–UNHCR Joint Data Center on Forced Displacement (JDC) explored the feasibility of expanding these household panel surveys of national populations to include statistically representative subsamples of forcibly displaced households.
The JDC was inaugurated in October 2019 to synergize World Bank and UNHCR work on data. Specifically, it seeks to facilitate collection,analysis and dissemination of anonymized primary socio-economic microdata on forcibly displaced populations and their hosts. An extended report on these data is expected to be released around World Refugee Day 2021. Because the data are not harmonized, point estimates should not be compared between countries. Rather, the results here illustrate crosscountry trends that are substantively similar or dissimilar. panel surveys of national populations to include statistically representative subsamples of forcibly displaced households
As of April 2021, the JDC has supported analyses of COVID-related phone survey data in Bangladesh and Yemen, and data collection and analyses Djibouti, Ethiopia, and Iraq. Similarly, World Bank and UNHCR teams came together in Kenya130 and Uganda131 to conduct the phone survey on refugee households that is comparable to the respective national phone surveys. Local adaptations vary the timing, number of rounds and content of each survey wave across the eight countries.
The results from these seven countries are neither globally representative nor causal in their attribution of observed outcomes to the pandemic. Nevertheless, they aim to be as statistically representative of defined national and forcefully displaced populations in those countries as possible.While not conclusive, these timely, contemporaneous, high-quality socio-economic microdata are instructive in understanding the range of welfare challenges experienced during COVID-19. The pandemic’s effects are a function of individual and country initial economic conditions and drivers of displacement, so the experience of a particular displaced person or population may be inconsistent with these results. While the samples are representative of households that can be reached by mobile phone, most of the analyses apply re-weighting techniques to make the statistics as representative as possible of the full national and displaced populations, including those not reachable by phone.
General trends in this piece are based on all countries (of the seven) that had included the indicator in their public briefs; statistics presented from specific countries reflect the range of the countries’ experiences. Drawing on a conceptual model developed in a JDC working paper on the theorized socio-economic effects of COVID-19 on those affected by forced displacement, the results presented here follow indicators on income, living standards and coping strategies to give general trends and illustrative statistics on the range of experiences of displaced and host communities during the pandemic.
Socio-economic implications of COVID-19
Income loss
Displaced people are at risk of losing income from both labour and non-labour sources, such as assistance or remittances. Indeed, total income likely has decreased for large shares of displaced households in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Uganda and Yemen. But there is a wide range in the share of households affected. Compared to before the pandemic, 89 per cent of refugee households in Uganda reported reductions in total income, versus 27 per cent of those in Ethiopia.
Labour income: Host and forcibly displaced households experienced lower levels of employment and decreases in labour income during the pandemic. For nearly all countries analysed, employment rates among displaced populations were lower than among host communities. In Djibouti, for example, 83 per cent of national households’ main income earners worked in January 2021 compared to only 54 per cent of main income earners from the displaced sample. However, in Yemen, employment losses were similar for displaced and host households. In Iraq, unemployment among IDP households in camps was much higher than for hosts or IDPs not living in camps. Movement restrictions to curb the spread of COVID-19 would likely have the largest economic fallout on employment and income for casual labourers and informal workers. Consequently, restrictions may have disproportionately affected forcibly displaced populations in Djibouti, Ethiopia and Kenya, where a large share of workers are informal. Labour market recovery is uneven. In Ethiopia, the labour market has rebounded to pre-pandemic levels for nationals, but it is still 10 percentage points lower for refugees. Employment in Kenya saw a 7–10 percentage point increase in the five months ending in November 2020 for both hosts and refugees, but a 40-percentage point gap still remained between the two groups. And although Ugandans’ employment has returned to pre-lockdown levels, employment among refugees has not, even though refugees reported being more excluded from the labour market before the pandemic.
Non-labour income: Displaced households’ nonlabour income often waned during the pandemic. Remittance income generally decreased, but assistance income was more mixed. While still a main source of income in Djibouti and Ethiopia, remittances decreased after the onset of the pandemic for both refugee and host households. Nearly half of refugee households in Ethiopia received foreign remittances, but by September 36 per cent of those households had experienced a drop in the total value of those remittances. A similar scenario unfolded in Djibouti where 36 per cent of refugees in settlements received remittances and help from friends; of those, 32 per cent saw the value of those remittances decline. Government and international assistance also represent a large share of refugee and host nonlabour income, helping both groups cope with the socio-economic shocks associated with the pandemic. Government safety nets and international assistance programmes increased for most households in Ethiopia and Uganda. And while assistance in Ethiopia did decrease from September to October 2020 for refugees, it shrank for a far greater share of the national population.
Shocks and coping strategies Loss of labour and non-labour income places severe stress on households. Displaced households experienced harsh socio-economic shocks related to the pandemic and adopted different coping mechanisms across these eight countries surveyed. In Uganda, every refugee household suffered at least one negative shock in each round of data collection, compared to 42 per cent of Ugandans who did not experience any shock between March and June 2020. In Uganda as elsewhere, increases in the price of food items consumed was by far the most commonly experienced shock; employment, illness, and agricultural losses were also by some. Households generally coped with these shocks using three main strategies: (1) reduction in food and non-food consumption; (2) assistance from family and friends; and (3) assistance from government and nongovernment actors.
Lower living standards Reductions in food and non-food consumption were frequently reported by both displaced and nondisplaced households in all eight surveyed countries. Deficiencies in nutrition, health and education incurred during the pandemic may have long-term negative repercussions on the well-being of affected populations by impairing human capital formation. Food security: Access to food was a common concern for both forcibly displaced and host households throughout the pandemic in these countries. Host households were typically more likely to be able to access food than displaced households in Djibouti, Iraq, Kenya, Uganda and Yemen. Households pointed to decreases in income and increases in food prices over the pandemic period as the reasons for decreased food security in those countries. The persistence of food insecurity and inadequate diet may presage a severe, and possibly prolonged, impact of COVID-19 on health beyond direct infection. Families facing food shortages adopt elements of all three coping strategies. In Kenya, more than three quarters of refugee households reduced meals, and adults in half of refugee households went without food so that children could eat. Receiving assistance from personal networks was common in Djibouti, Ethiopia, Iraq and Uganda. And cash, food and food stamp assistance from governments, international partners and NGOs also played an important role in mitigating some of the negative effects of the pandemic – particularly for refugee households Djibouti, Ethiopia and Uganda. In Ethiopia, refugee households can purchase food items more readily than host households – likely as a result of the assistance refugees typically receive.
Education: The pandemic may also have long-lasting ramifications by sharply reducing access to education. Pandemic lockdowns restricted participation in learning activities for both host and displaced children in Ethiopia, Iraq and Uganda. Refugee children often showed remarkable resilience in keeping with their studies. The few displaced children enrolled in school prior to the pandemic were likely to continue engagement in educational activities. Prior to the pandemic, enrolment rates in Ethiopia were higher among the national population than among refugees; however, among all children previously enrolled, refugees were more likely to engage in learning activities during the pandemic. Still, refugee educational engagement dwindled as the pandemic wore on in Ethiopia. Only 1 in 5 host households with school-age children in Iraq were able to engage in any learning activities, yet they were still twice as likely to do so as IDP households. When countries begin to allow schools to reopen, that progress may be slow and uneven. A month after schools in Ethiopia started to reopen, less than 10 per cent of refugee households with school-age children indicated that their child’s school was open.
Health care: Displaced populations in all seven countries indicated significant challenges accessing health services when they needed it.
This is a clear public health concern – particularly during a pandemic. Displaced households typically faced greater challenges than non-displaced households in accessing medical care in Djibouti, Ethiopia and Iraq. Where such data were collected – Djibouti,. Ethiopia and Uganda – the “inability to pay” was overwhelmingly the most common reason given by both displaced and non-displaced households for why they could not access health care
Notwithstanding the many concurrent challenges faced by Yemen, Figure 32 suggests the influence of the pandemic on health care access is clearly visible. Prior to March 2020, the share of respondents with poor access to health care was on a downward trend for both IDPs and the host community, but the pandemic erased those gains with a 12-15 percentage point jump in March which only started to decrease at the end of the year.
Insights for data collection: Survey results during COVID-19 for these eight contexts have yielded four important observations regarding data collection and data systems: • In the face of large health and socio-economic shocks like the pandemic, the need for timely data on displaced populations is particularly acute. A shock’s repercussions frequently differ between displaced and host communities. Monitoring their welfare facilitates appropriately differentiated responses. • Flexibility while maintaining statistical rigour with phone surveys is possible – when the conditions are right. Reliable statistics require a robust sampling strategy, sampling frame and carefully derived weights. • The need to shift from face-to-face data collection during the pandemic demonstrated that highfrequency phone surveys can be a useful tool. These methods can be innovatively applied to collect data on difficult-to-reach populations and can reduce data production time and cost – although often at the expense of survey length and the inability to control the interview environment to pursue sensitive topics. Though not without significant challenges in overcoming sampling and selection bias, phone surveys are a useful complement to face-to-face surveys in filling data gaps. • Finally, an inclusive agenda in which forcibly displaced populations are integrated into data collected by national statistical systems can build capacity and make it possible to incorporate the needs of displaced populations into operational planning.
Looking forward:The pandemic has compounded immediate and longer-term challenges to household welfare. Phone survey data indicates well-being generally has deteriorated, sometimes drastically. Yet there is important variation across socio-economic indicators, countries and even across forcibly displaced groups within a country. Recovery from the pandemic is likely to be slow and, just as with its impacts, uneven across countries, populations and dimensions of well-being. The full extent of human and economic costs to households and countries may not be known for some time, but it will certainly be felt for years to come as the effects of income loss, food insecurity and foregone education reverberate for a generation
United Nations Chamber Music Society Virtual Concert in Celebration of World Refugee Day 2021
VIRTUAL GLOBAL LAUNCH:
Sunday, 20 June 2021
9:00am EST (New York Time)
4:00pm EEST (Amman, Jordan Time)
Watch the performance: United Nations
UN Global YouTube;
UN WebTV;
UNHCR Global Youtube;:
UNHCR Jordan Facebook.
On the occasion of World Refugee Day on Sunday, 20 June 2021, the UN Chamber Music Society of the United Nations Staff Recreation Council (UNCMS), in partnership with the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), will hold a pre-recorded virtual concert, which will also be broadcasted in Jordan, which is home to hundreds of thousands refugees. Refugees and other displaced populations belong to the most marginalized and vulnerable members of society. They are particularly at risk during the time of the coronavirus disease outbreak, because they often have limited access to water, sanitation systems and health facilities.
Music is a symbolizes love and peace, and holds the power to highlight the plight of the refugees. In celebration of World Refugee Day, and in honour of the refugees all around the world, the music programme will open with music featuring Jordanian Singer, Leen Alfaqih; as well as the world premiere of the Songs of Five Continents for the UN Chamber Music Society, composed by Yuko Uébayashi, as well as beautiful repertoire composed and performed by classically trained Syrian musicians. Founded in 2016, the UNCMS is dedicated to promoting the UN goals at large - through the universal language of music.
Message
H.E. Mr. António Guterres
UN Secretary-General
Remarks
Filippo Grandi
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
Melissa Fleming
UN Under-Secretary-General for Global Communications
UN Chamber Music Society
of the United Nations Staff Recreation Council
Brenda Vongova, Artistic Director
Featuring Syrian MUSICIANS and SPECIAL GUEST Artists
Leen Alfaqih (Jordanian Singer)
Carol Wincenc (Flutist) ● Yuko Uébayashi (Composer)
PROGRAMME
I. Opening
“Hadi Ya Bahr”
Leen Alfaqih (Jordanian Singer)
Brenda Vongova (Piano), Abigail Hong (Violin), James Kang (Viola), Derek Louie (Cello)
II. Hope for Refugees
Basilius Alawad (1994 - ) From a Refugee’s Memory (World premiere)
Basilius Alawad (Cello)
SERGEI RACHMANINOFF (1873 - 1943) 2 Pieces, TN ii/22: No. 2 Romance in A Major
Amin Helou (Piano); Angela Boutros (Piano); Brenda Vongova (Piano)
III. Songs of Five Continents
Naoko Nakajima (Violin I), Hana Mundiya (Violin II), Noémie Chemali (Viola), Derek Louie (Cello), Logan May (Bass), Sooh Jeon (Flute), Lucian Avalon (Oboe), Chai Lee (Harp), Brenda Vongova (Piano)
SPECIAL THANKS
UN Department of Global Communications
UN Refugee Agency
UNHCR Jordan
UNHCR New York Office
Artwork of Poster:
Nabil Jubouri, Iraqi refugee artist in Amman
VERY SPECIAL THANKS
KlavierHaus
Sujatri Reisinger
Video Production of “Hadi Ya Bahr”
Dylan Louie, Director of Photography
Audio Production
VIRTUA CREATIVE
Edward Bilous, Artistic Director and Producer
Anran Qian, Music Editor
Keren Plowden, Production Coordinator
Greg Kalember, Mix Engineer
Video Editing
Rebecca Dixuan Bai, Video Editor
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https://donate.unhcr.org/