Hoogeveen, JohannesSilva, KarishmaHopper, Robert Benjamin2025-05-012025-05-012025-06-09978-1-4648-1969-8https://hdl.handle.net/10986/43145"Making Refugee Self-Reliance Work: From Aid to Employment in Sub-Saharan Africa" advocates for the enhancement of refugee self-reliance as a strategic, humane, development approach to refugee assistance. Facilitating refugees’ capacity to support themselves through gainful work not only upholds their dignity and autonomy but also offers socioeconomic benefits to host communities by unlocking opportunities for shared investment and development. The report demonstrates how refugee self-reliance in Sub-Saharan Africa remains elusive and identifies various reasons why this is the case: encampment limits the scope for self-reliance; restrictions on refugees’ right to work hinder self-sufficiency; small allocations of infertile land make even subsistence farming impossible; aid delivery in specific areas contributes to settlement patterns in which skills and economic opportunities do not match; economic development in remote, resource-scarce regions is unsustainable; and dependence on aid shifts funding priorities from long-term development to unproductive care and maintenance models. To overcome these challenges, the report outlines five areas for policy action: 1. Ending restrictive encampment policies 2. Boosting refugees’ economic participation 3. Supporting host communities 4. Reshaping financing and investment models 5. Investing in preparedness. Success requires committed leadership from host governments, as well as coordinated engagement and sustained support from humanitarian organizations and development partners.en-USCC BY 3.0 IGOREFUGEESREFUGEE SELF-RELIANCESUBSISTENCE NEEDSMaking Refugee Self-Reliance Work: From Aid to Employment in Sub-Saharan AfricaBookWorld Bank10.1596/978-1-4648-1969-8https://doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-1969-8