As World Refugee Day 2026 is being marked, it is worth pointing to the strong foundations that exist based on research, which can inform policy at a time when humanitarian needs are pressing, while border control practices lead to migrant deaths.
The significant pressures faced by countries hosting large numbers of refugees are well evidenced. Approaches centred on “helping people where they are” often do not reasonably reflect the finite capacity of these states. In 2025, for example, UNHCR operations were heavily underfunded in key refugee-hosting countries, including Lebanon and Turkey.
This raises broader questions about responsibility-sharing. If wealthier states are unable to increase resettlement or funding, it becomes harder to see how the principles of the Global Compact on Refugees (2018) can be meaningfully sustained.
Marking the 75th anniversary of the Refugee Convention this year also invites reflection—not only on commitments made, but on how they are being carried forward in practice today.
Read more from PRIO's research:
- Underfunding Syrian refugees in Lebanon & Turkey after Assad’s fall (2026)
- What problems are third‑country asylum centres intended to solve? (2026)
- Rethinking aid: Lessons from refugee‑led responses (2026)
- Forced migrant arrivals can reduce political trust in African host communities (2026)
- De facto economic integration of Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh (2025)
- Reimagining humanitarianism: relational accountability in locally-led responses (2025)
- Conceptualizing and Measuring Conflict-Related Determinants of Migration (2025)
- Education desires and conflict impacts in refugees’ decisions to leave (2024)
- Rohingya refugees make films about their struggle for education (2023)