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déplacés

Déplacés is a French term used to describe people who are forced to leave their homes but remain inside their own country. In humanitarian and legal contexts, the most common term is personnes déplacées internes and is usually translated as internally displaced persons (IDPs). Déplacés differ from refugees, who have crossed an international border to seek protection. IDPs remain under the protection of their government, but displacement can expose them to insecurity, loss of livelihood, and difficulties in accessing basic services.

Causes include armed conflict, violence, persecution, human rights abuses, and natural or environmental disasters. Development projects

Protection and durable solutions are addressed by international law, notably the UN Guiding Principles on Internal

that
relocate
communities,
such
as
dam
construction
or
urban
renewal,
can
also
cause
displacement.
Displacement
often
results
in
ongoing
humanitarian
needs
for
shelter,
food,
water,
healthcare,
education,
and
protection
from
violence,
including
gender-based
violence.
Displacement
(1998).
These
principles
call
for
non-discrimination,
protection
from
forcible
relocation,
access
to
humanitarian
aid,
and
measures
to
ensure
safety.
States
bear
primary
responsibility
to
prevent
displacement
and
to
assist
IDPs,
while
humanitarian
actors
support
relief
and
the
pursuit
of
durable
solutions,
such
as
voluntary
return,
local
integration,
or
resettlement
in
another
part
of
the
country.
Numbers
are
dynamic
and
vary
by
conflict
and
disaster,
but
IDPs
remain
a
critical
concern
in
humanitarian
policy
and
planning.