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Abstract
Background
Informing local decision-making, improving service delivery and designing household surveys require having access to high-spatial resolution mapping of the targeted population. However, this detailed spatial information remains unavailable for specific population subgroups, such as refugees, a vulnerable group that would significantly benefit from focused interventions. Given the continuous increase in the number of refugees, reaching an all-time high of 35.3 million people in 2022, it is imperative to develop models that can accurately inform about their spatial locations, enabling better and more tailored assistance.
Methods
We leverage routinely collected registration data on refugees and combine it with high-resolution population maps, satellite imagery derived settlement maps and other spatial covariates to disaggregate observed refugee totals into 100-m grid cells. We suggest a deterministic grid cell allocation inside monitored refugee sites based on building count and a random-forest-derived grid cell allocation outside refugee sites based on geolocating the textual geographic information in the refugee register and on high-resolution population mapping. We test the method in Cameroon using the registration database monitored by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
Results
Using OpenStreetMap, 83% of the manually inputted information in the registration database could be geolocated. The building footprint layer derived from satellite imagery by Ecopia AI offers extensive coverage within monitored refugee sites, although manual digitization was still required in rapidly evolving settings. The high-resolution mapping of refugees on a 100-m grid basis provides an unparalleled level of spatial detail, enabling valuable geospatial insights for informed local decision-making.
Conclusions
Gathering information on forcibly displaced persons in sparse data-setting environment can quickly become very costly. Therefore, it is critical to gain the most knowledge from operational data that is frequently collected, such as registration databases. Integrating it with ancillary information derived from satellite imagery paves the way for obtaining more timely and spatially precise information to better deliver services and enhance sampling frame for target data collection exercises that further improves the quality of information on people in need.
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Details

1 University of Southampton, WorldPop Research Group, Southampton, UK (GRID:grid.5491.9) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9297); University of Oxford, Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science, Oxford, UK (GRID:grid.4991.5) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 8948)
2 United Nations, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Regional Bureau for West and Central Africa, Dakar, Senegal (GRID:grid.4991.5)
3 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Regional Bureau for the Americas, Panama City, Panama (GRID:grid.4991.5)
4 United Nations, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Innovation, Geneva, Switzerland (GRID:grid.475735.7) (ISNI:0000 0004 0404 6364)
5 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Regional Bureau for Southern Africa, Pretoria, South Africa (GRID:grid.475735.7)
6 University of Southampton, WorldPop Research Group, Southampton, UK (GRID:grid.5491.9) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9297)
7 University of Southampton, WorldPop Research Group, Southampton, UK (GRID:grid.5491.9) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9297); University of Sulaymaniyah, Natural Resources Department, College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences, Sulaymaniyah, Iraq (GRID:grid.440843.f)