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Elizabeth Ferris

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Elizabeth Ferris is a senior fellow in foreign policy and the co-director of the Brookings-LSE Project on Internal Displacement in Washington, D.C.

Prior to joining Brookings in November 2006, Ferris spent 20 years working in the field of humanitarian assistance, most recently in Geneva, Switzerland at the World Council of Churches. There she was responsible for the Council’s work in humanitarian response and long-term development. In this capacity, she worked with many local, national, and international nongovernmental organizations to support capacity building and to advocate for the protection of refugees, internally displaced persons, and other populations affected by conflict.

She has also served as the director of the Church World Service’s Immigration and Refugee Program, the research director for the Life & Peace Institute in Uppsala, Sweden, and a Fulbright professor at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Her teaching experience has included positions at Lafayette College, Miami University, and Pembroke State University.

Her articles have appeared in Refugee Survey QuarterlyForced Migration Review, Journal of Refugee Studies, The Washington Post, The Washington Times, International Review of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, and many other publications. Her most recent book, “The Politics of Protection: The Limits of Humanitarian Action,” was published by Brookings Institution Press in April 2011.

Ferris received her bachelor’s from Duke University and her master’s and doctorate from the University of Florida.

The Latest from Elizabeth Ferris

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The Syrian Refugee Crisis: What’s Next?
  • Analysis
  • The Syrian Refugee Crisis: What’s Next?

    “What’s going to happen to the Syrian refugees?” This was the question I asked of everyone I met during a recent trip to Lebanon and Turkey to research Syrian displacement. Without exception, those I asked—government and UN officials, academics, business and NGO representatives, Syrian diaspora groups, and Syrian refugees—responded with the same answer: “I don’t know” (or sometimes “‘God only knows”). When pressed, almost everyone said that the war in Syria would continue for the foreseeable future and that more people would likely leave or try to leave.

    July 20, 2015

    Introduction to Iraq's Refugees and IDP Crisis: Human Toll and Implications
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Introduction to Iraq's Refugees and IDP Crisis: Human Toll and Implications

    Originally posted July 2008

    In the comparatively short time since the establishment of the Iraqi state in 1920, the country has experienced successive waves of forced migration. Yet the magnitude of the forced displacement of Iraqis from their homes since 2003 is unprecedented. In addition to the still dire humanitarian situation are the potentially far-reaching negative implications of the refugee/IDP crisis for the future of Iraq and the Middle East as a whole.

    October 11, 2012