New Humanitarian Infrastructures at the End of Aid

Description of the granted funding

This project investigates how humanitarian systems in Kenya are adapting following the withdrawal of USAID. USAID previously accounted for 40% of humanitarian funding in Kenya, causing a massive reduction in rations and essential services leading to a rise in malnutrition, insecurity, and the spread of infectious diseases in refugee camps. The research examines three key areas: state-led initiatives like Kenya's Shirika Plan; refugee-led infrastructures such as community organizations; and transnational remittance networks that sustain life and connect refugees globally. Using ethnographic research in Kakuma Refugee Camp, Kenya, and Edmonton, Canada, the project will research how new humanitarian infrastructures shape governance, the state and refugee agency. The findings can offer practical insights for policymakers, promoting more inclusive and sustainable responses to displacement in an era of declining international aid.
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Starting year

2026

End year

2030

Granted funding

Stefan Millar Orcid -palvelun logo
684 982 €

Funder

Research Council of Finland

Funding instrument

Academy research fellows

Decision maker

Scientific Council for Social Sciences and Humanities
11.06.2026

Other information

Funding decision number

377362

Research fields

Antropologia ja etnologia

Identified topics

migration, immigration, refugees