Host Cities
How Refugees Are Transforming the World’s Urban Settings
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Yale University Press
Publishing:18th Nov '25
£20.00
This title is due to be published on 18th November, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

An important study of the interaction of refugees and cities, exploring how cities are affected, how they respond, and how they are transformed
Cities all over the world experience large humanitarian influxes, and refugees and citizens alike must navigate the ensuing risks and opportunities. Over the past twenty-five years, Karen Jacobsen has studied the interaction of refugees and cities and has trained scores of graduate students, many of whom now work with United Nations agencies or humanitarian nongovernmental organizations. Her research team at Tufts and this global network of aid workers give her firsthand knowledge of the impact of forced migration on cities and the lives of refugees living there.
Focusing on cities and refugees in Africa and the Middle East, Jacobsen draws universal lessons, distilling her research findings and wisdom from decades of experience into clear, vivid prose. The book is valuable for researchers, policy analysts, donors, and humanitarian workers in cities around the globe and for all readers trying to understand, beyond the headlines, one of the most troubling and volatile issues of our time.
“Karen Jacobsen’s research helped put the distinctive challenges and opportunities facing urban refugees on the map. In this vital new work, Jacobsen moves the conversation forward, illuminating refugees’ distinctive experiences in cities, and the strategies they use to address the obstacles they encounter, in tandem with their allies.”—Megan Bradley, McGill University
“Many refugees seek a new, safe life in cities—and also transform them. Jacobsen resists easy moralism, presenting displacement as neither crisis nor cure-all, but as a feature of our century and a catalyst that cities can squander or harness. The result is a deeply informed vision into one of the greatest global policy challenges of our time, and a rich sketch of a better path forward.”—Michael Clemens, George Mason University and the Peterson Institute for International Economics
“A vivid and engaging examination of the lives of refugees and migrants in urban areas of the developing world. Jacobsen’s book explains how cities act as places of sanctuary and support for new arrivals, but also as locations where danger and precarity are prevalent.”—Jeff Crisp, Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford
“Host Cities makes a significant contribution to the literature on urban refugees. Karen Jacobsen pulls together a compelling story, based on years of field experience, about the impact of refugees on cities and the effects of urban life on refugees. Scholars, students, and the informed general reader will find Host Cities to be readable, informative, and compassionate—a trifecta found in few books.”—Susan Martin, Georgetown University
ISBN: 9780300254693
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
352 pages