INDR Resources
About INDR | About INDR |
|
|
The first international meeting was co-sponsored by the Refugee Studies Center and the World Bank at Oxford in 1995. In 2000, at the invitation of the Tenth World Congress of Rural Sociology, Michael Cernea led five full days of sessions on population resettlement in Rio de Janeiro. At this congress, an ad hoc meeting organized by Ted Downing (University of Arizona) and Shi Guoquing (Hohai University, China), 60 resettlement specialists from over 20 countries formed the International Network on Displacement and Resettlement (INDR). The International Network on Displacement and Resettlement (INDR) provides a virtual, global communications network of scholars, practitioners, and policy makers attempting to prevent development-induced impoverishment.
Future sections of this website will provide one-stop access to research information on policies, risk assessment, mitigation methods, theoretical development, and the evaluation of development-induced resettlement.
Only registered users can write comments!
Powered by !JoomlaComment 3.26
3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved." |
||||||
| INDR identifies key human rights issues in the IFC involuntary resettlement policy revision |
|
On behalf of INDR, Theodore (Ted) Downing helped prepared an overview of human rights issues to be considered in the revision of the International Finance Corporation's Performance Standard on Involuntary Resettlement and Land Acquistion (PS5). INDR joined with the International Accountabiity Project (Jennifer Kalafut) and the Housing and Land Rights Network (Shivani Chaudhry) to prepare a brief on key Issues for Upholding Housing Land and Property Rights in the International Finance Corporation’s Review of Environmental and Social Policy Standards (Jan 2010). Their findings highlighted 1) minimizing displacement and ensuring that displaced persons are project beneficiaries, 2) inclusion of individuals and communities who lose their livelihoods because of polluted fisheries, diminished water supplies, air pollution and other project impacts who face the full gamut of potential human rights violations and risks associated with unmitigated displacement, 3) inclusion of full risk assessment and livelihood restoration measures, 4) ensurance that there are specific requirements for providing information and training about rights and processes options (including IFC policies and accountability mechanisms) by a third party prior to negotiations to help balance the bargaining power, and 5) strengthening of free, prior and informed consent in compliance with other international standards. |