Syrian Refugees in Lebanon

Crisis & Control, (In)Formal Hybrid Security in Lebanon

This report aims to analyse how formal and informal security providers implement their respective social order agendas through a security “assemblage”. It also aims to inform the debate on refugee protection and security provision in urban settings, in the context of Lebanon’s hybrid security system. The accounts collected illustrate how state security institutions tacitly accept – or even rely on – informal security actors, managing at times to achieve their political and strategic goals through decentralised and/or illegal forms of control.

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Official response to the Syrian refugee crisis in Lebanon, the disastrous policy of no-policy

According to UNHCR, “over 2 million people have fled Syria since the beginning of the conflict in 2011, making this one of the largest refugee exoduses in recent history with no end yet in sight. The refugee population in the region could reach over 4 million by the end of 2014[1].

WVi: WASH

Water and sanitation activities (water vouchers, water tanks, water filters, showers, waste-water disposal, toilets, sewage disposal, hygiene promotion) in tented settlements.

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