What is Refugee.Land
Last updated
Last updated
This app is part of the Refugee.Land project. The Refugee.Land app aims to help and support refugees around the world.
We believe everyone should be able to feel safe.
Feel free to join our community. Help us build a platform for people fleeing war-torn countries, natural disasters, and other threats.
Refugee land is an application that connects refugees to property owners with free lodging space. This allows for quick response during disasters which renders citizens of any country to gain free and temporary lodging.
The aim is to allow for the public to gain free access to resources available to them in any country.
For example; If there is a tsunami in the coastal regions of Madagascar, the government there may not have the infrastructure or systems in place to help relocate families at short notice. The affected families will be guided to our application from Red Cross or other humanitarian aid services to allow them to seek for advertised lodging in other areas of the country that have not been affected by the disaster.
Home owners can advertise rooms or any other forms of shelter to provide the family members a place to stay temporarily until they are rehabilitated by their government.
Both parties can filter and restrict different types of individuals on a trust basis.
A “refugee” is defined as a person who has crossed an international border “owing to well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion” (1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees). In some contexts, the definition extends to persons fleeing “events seriously disturbing public order” (1969 OAU Convention 1984 Cartagena Declaration). Climate change affects people inside their own countries, and typically creates internal displacement before it reaches a level where it displaces people across borders. However, there may be situations where the refugee criteria of the 1951 Convention or the broader refugee criteria of regional refugee law frameworks could apply. People may have a valid claim for refugee status, for example, where the adverse effects of climate change interact with armed conflict and violence. Building on its study 'In Harm’s Way’, in 2020, UNHCR issued Legal Considerations to guide interpretation and steer international discussion on such claims. Regardless, the term “climate refugee” is not endorsed by UNHCR, and it is more accurate to refer to “persons displaced in the context of disasters and climate change.”
source: https://www.unhcr.org/climate-change-and-disasters.html
Protecting Refugees: questions and answers from the UN Refugee Agency