Working and discussion papersSeptember 2019Nicholas Crawford, Sorcha O'CallaghanMaking bricks at Bidi Bidi refugee settlement in Uganda. Photo: Fundacja PCPMThree years in, is the ‘new way of working’ for refugees actually working? Unsurprisingly, the picture is mixed.With global refugee numbers at almost 26 million, a record high, and refugee situations extending for decades, the Comprehensive Refugee Response Framework (CRRF) and Global Compact on Refugees (GCR) offer an opportunity to change the model of refugee hosting in order to benefit refugees and their hosts.This review of the application of the CRRF in four East African countries – Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda – shows some positive progress, but high-income countries and donor governments are largely failing in their commitment to share responsibility for refugees.Key findingsThere is greater acceptance among hosting governments, donors and aid actors of more inclusive approaches to refugees; progress has been made in relation to some refugee rights and freedoms; and new donors, actors and initiatives in support of refugees have emerged.By not tackling mobility or supporting self-reliance in urban environments, the new way of working for refugees risks perpetuating the current system of isolating refugees in remote, impoverished regions where continued dependency on humanitarian assistance is a likely outcome.Predictable and long-term development funding must be stepped up dramatically to transform the economies of refugee-hosting districts.Greater funding is also required to encourage hosting governments to integrate refugees into national systems – a major public sector reform process that requires more concerted strategic engagement and funding.Self-reliance and refugee inclusion is likely to cost more, rather than less, in the short-term – the CRRF and Global Compact cannot be used as a means for donor withdrawal from humanitarian support. Read the research into progress of the CRRF in Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda. Read the research The Comprehensive Refugee Response Framework: responsibility-sharing and self-reliance in East AfricaDocumentpdfRelated The Comprehensive Refugee Response Framework: progress in four East African countriesFour case studies assessing progress made under the ‘new way of working’ for refugees in Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda.Working and discussion papers27 September 2019 Multi-year humanitarian funding: a thematic evaluationAssessing the effectiveness of DFID’s multi-year humanitarian funding approach in protracted crises.Research reports and studies18 July 2019 The humanitarian response in Iraq: support beyond international assistance in MosulExploring non-traditional sources of humanitarian financing and crisis response in the context of Mosul, Iraq.Working and discussion papers10 July 2019See more:migration and refugeesdisplacementdevelopment financehumanitarian policyKenyaEthiopiaUgandaRwanda