U.S COMMITTEE FOR REFUGEES AND IMMIGRANTS
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From the Archives: Refugee Warehousing

June 17, 2026

As World Refugee Day approaches, we’re returning to work that has never stopped being relevant. 

More than two decades ago, USCRI launched a global campaign to end refugee warehousing—the prolonged denial of refugees’ rights through restrictions on movement, employment, and self-reliance, often in camps or other segregated settings. Warehousing leaves millions of displaced people trapped in conditions of dependency and enforced idleness, in violation of protections enshrined in the 1951 Refugee Convention, which marks its 75th anniversary this year. The urgency that drove that campaign has not diminished. 

Last week, UNHCR’s latest Global Trends report offered a sobering reminder. Global refugee numbers declined in 2025 for the first time in a decade. But more than 7 in 10 refugees originate from just six countries, and millions remain trapped in protracted displacement with little prospect of return, resettlement, or local integration. 

When USCRI published Lives in Storage in 2019, 5.8 million refugees had already been living in protracted situations for over 20 years. For them, a camp was never temporary. It was their life. Refugee status should not be inherited. Yet, for too many families, it is. 

Refugee warehousing violates rights enshrined in the 1951 Refugee Convention: the right to work, freedom of movement, access to education. These are binding obligations that continue to go unmet. 

World Refugee Day is a moment to bear witness. The pieces collected here from our archives document a long-standing truth: refugees should not spend years or generations confined to camps, denied opportunity and dignity. Ending refugee warehousing was the right cause in 2004. It remains the right cause today. 

Read Lives in Storage: USCRI’s 2019 Refugee Warehousing Report here.

 


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