dc.description.abstract | Resettling refugees was a last resort and only 1% were resettled (Velasquez, 2015, p.4). Urban
refugees had different identities; for example, those under UNHCR; allowed and not allowed to
settle in Kampala, unregistered and self-settled refugees, and the persecuted and vulnerable cases
under the care of INTERAID (Macchiavello, 2003, p.3). The study examined the contributions
and challenges of urban refugees to economic development and peace building in Uganda as host
nation. The research employed phenomenological case study design, involving eight participants.
In the study, the findings were: to question 1) the reasons for urban refugee presence in Uganda
were both cost and opportunistic reasons, from wars to economic ends. 2) Urban Refugees were
peaceful as there were more concerned with recovery from the effects of war and were humble in
their relationship with the local community because they anticipate greater support from them; to
question. Urban Refugees were highly motivated to work and picked on any job, even without
capital. Refugees with skills and capital managed to establish retail outlets from which Ugandans
bought items and paid taxes to the council; to question 3) The Urban refugees faced the
challenges of immediate and negative-natural reaction to strangers, high taxes, being
misunderstood, cheated, and xenophobic sentiments and cost of living that were equally being
experienced by host communities; to question 4) there were advocacies by local traders for
equal economic rights between urban refugees and host communities, while ordinary Ugandans
preferred special considerations for national opportunities for development against their
counterparts, the refugees. The status of urban refugees in Kampala City, Uganda’s capital city
was impressive and very encouraging for policy makers and refugees -themselves. The phobic
stunt was a shared emotion that strangers would encounter on their very first day of meeting,
where integrating and building a mutually rewarding relationship with the host community gave
rise to new emotions of happiness and prosperity in their endeavors alongside their hosts, felt
more peaceful, found new homes, integrated well, and excelled at businesses as well as in
various jobs they did for either fellow refugees or their hosts. | en_US |