Empowered networks: exploring digital equity & spatial subversion in the rohingya refugee settlements
Abstract
This thesis aims to re-investigate effective  placemaking in the humanitarian context,  particularly in the Rohingya refugee crisis in  Bangladesh. It will explore the impact of  design in promoting digital equity within  existing spatial subversions in the refugee  camps. The empowerment of underprivileged  populations through digital literacy and equity  has been an emerging topic in the design field  for the last two decades. On the other hand,  the global crisis of refugee settlements and  the geopolitical debates regarding the  physical and socio-cultural rehabilitation of  informal and forced migration across  countries continue to persist. The Rohingya  population from Myanmar, often called “the  world’s most persecuted minority”1, has been  forcefully displaced and is confined within the  refugee camps in the coastal borders of the  neighboring country Bangladesh. While they  are thriving in a status quo with the  repatriation in stasis, the settlements  continue to grow, creating complex challenges  regarding the spatial design, functioning of the  community, and their empowerment within  the closed boundaries. This thesis is an attempt to explore how multi scalar mapping can reveal impactful socio economic dynamics concerning the design  complexities in a refugee settlement, which  often gets out of focus from a top-down aerial  perspective. Moreover, the prevalent  practices regarding the use of digital tools in  design are often indifferent to the questions  of digital equity among the underprivileged  population and in the accommodation of  relevant needs of technology and energy  sources in the camps. Although initiatives to  improve Internet accessibility, such UNHCR's  Connectivity for Refugees and NetHope,  advance and increase programmatic research  on usage and accessibility, there is still “a  persistent gap between idealized visions of  what digital connectivity could achieve  (globally) and evidence about how new  connectivities are used in specific contexts”  (Smart et al., 2016).22 Design interventions  have the potential to work as a subversive  advocate for the refugees in this situation, to  bring out their voices and needs from a  bottom-up approach of spatial dissection. The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the  dynamics of place-making within the critical  socio-cultural context of the refugee camp  and the ways to promote digital equity  through design. This has a major impact on  shifting the socio-economic paradigm in the  settlements and ensuring long-term resilience  and empowerment for the refugees. The  research will be conducted in the existing  Rohingya refugee camps in Bangladesh as the  case study. The final aim is to explore adaptive  alternatives in placemaking, within the digital  infrastructure of the camps, which will  empower the refugees to create an agency for  themselves that reciprocates the context specific paradoxes.
 Scholarly Commons @ MU
Scholarly Commons @ MU
                        