When I Go Back to South Sudan, I Will Implement this on My Own Farm
A South Sudanese man uses his time in the camp to learn skills he can take home with him. Abdo, a family man from South Sudan, uses his experience in
A South Sudanese man uses his time in the camp to learn skills he can take home with him. Abdo, a family man from South Sudan, uses his experience in
South Sudanese mother tries to earn enough to survive by supplementing her food rations with brewing liquor. Like many South Sudanese women we interviewed... have since settled in Bidi Bidi
A man from South Sudan shows what financial transitions can look like for highly educated refugees. Spoon, a male South Sudanese refugee, shows what relatively successful financial transitions can look
Lisbeth had successfully beat the odds to establish financial stability for her family until a combination of compounding financial shocks eroded her gains. As a young, single mother of two
Two professors learn to thrive in their new communities. In their previous lives in Venezuela, Vanessa and Leo held multiple degrees and worked in high-paying jobs as professors. They journeyed
An immigrant business owner from a dictatorship faces anxiety and frustration as a citizen of a repressive regime. “Where are you from?” asked “F.”, a man in his thirties, as
Restaurant owners and workers, Manik, Johnny, Moban, and Shaan, use tight-knit communities of friends and savings clubs to manage financial struggles. Images of French fries, burgers, and chickens decorate the
Social connections making migration affordable and worthwhile. The Indian restaurant, down the street from Quito’s Spanish Consulate and a private visa assistance company, is huge. It is two stories
Where one sees challenges, Rosa sees opportunities. We met Rosa, a 30 to 35-year-old Venezuelan woman, with her son and partner in their restaurant in La Florida, a Quito neighborhood
A “black sheep” in Ecuador navigates a the landscape of working as a migrant. David is a 33-year-old man from Venezuela who has spent five years in Ecuador with his
“We are waiting here until we leave. Until that time, the idea is to avoid getting into any trouble.” It is stories like that of Khaled that give hope to
“The giving hand is more blessed than the receiving hand.” Ismail, now twenty-nine, arrived in Jordan in December 2010 fleeing forceful recruiting of young men by the terrorist groups in