The urgency in providing basic shelter for a large, displaced and distressed population frequently means that the design of refugee camps follows a ‘generic top-down framework’ with basic humanitarian and techno-managerial planning strategies rising to the fore. These are usually based on a universal standardisation for the allocation of ‘shelter’ and its repetition in a grid-based settlement layout. Camps are planned with an anticipation of removal and disassembly in the short or medium term. This results in a military-style modular spatial hierarchy with formally defined boundaries. This paper is based on a systematic review of literature in the public domain about the Al-Zaatari Syrian refugee camp in Jordan. Despite the originally imposed uniformity, the story on the ground at this camp is one of a rapid transformation initially through collective determination. The UN's strictly orthogonal grid was rapidly overlayed and reconfigured to support a preferred way of living anchored in continuity of the previous social and cultural norms of the refugee population. This paper illustrates these processes of adaptation and transformation and examines the evolving distribution of space between occupants, the expansion of opportunities for income generation, and the introduction of new housing typologies and services. Early interventions were collectively initiated. Over time, the influence of informal market forces led to those with resources gained ascendancy over those with less.
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1 August 2023
Research Article|
May 26 2023
Design and use of space in refugee camps: a case study of a contested terrain Available to Purchase
Husam AlWaer, BArch, MRTPI, PhD, BREEAM AP, AoU, UDG
;
Husam AlWaer, BArch, MRTPI, PhD, BREEAM AP, AoU, UDG
Reader, Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design, University of Dundee Architecture and Urban Planning, Dundee, UK (corresponding author: h.alwaer@dundee.ac.uk)
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Magda Sibley, BArch, MArch, PhD
;
Magda Sibley, BArch, MArch, PhD
Professor in History and Theory of Architecture, The Welsh School of Architecture, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK
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Ian Cooper, BSc, BArch, PhD
Ian Cooper, BSc, BArch, PhD
Research Consultant, Eclipse Research, Cambridge, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
December 21 2022
Accepted:
April 04 2023
Online ISSN: 1755-0807
Print ISSN: 1755-0793
Emerald Publishing Limited: All rights reserved
2023
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Urban Design and Planning (2023) 176 (3): 123–141.
Article history
Received:
December 21 2022
Accepted:
April 04 2023
Citation
AlWaer H, Sibley M, Cooper I (2023), "Design and use of space in refugee camps: a case study of a contested terrain". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Urban Design and Planning, Vol. 176 No. 3 pp. 123–141, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/jurdp.22.00068
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