Forced Migration Needs Assessment
A forced-migration needs assessment is the structured, rapid process humanitarian actors use to understand what a displaced population urgently needs in the chaotic first days and weeks of a refugee or displacement crisis. Its reference standard is the Inter-Agency Standing Committee's Multi-Sector Initial Rapid Assessment (MIRA) framework, codified in 2015, which coordinates many agencies behind a single, comparable picture of needs rather than a scatter of overlapping, sector-specific surveys. The method is deliberately a pipeline: it begins with a secondary-data review that mines everything already known — pre-crisis baselines and early situation reports — to define what is still unknown; it then collects rapid primary data across sectors such as food, water, shelter, health, and protection through key-informant interviews, direct site observation, and reports from the affected people themselves; it converts these into standardized severity scores; and it ranks needs to prioritize the response. Because conditions are fluid and access is constrained, the assessment trades statistical precision for speed, coordination, and decision-relevance, producing a shared analytical basis for an inter-agency humanitarian appeal and response plan.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
Curated claims
Claims persisted in the evidence ledger, each with its own assessment.
This view does not invent a claim assessment when the ledger has none.
Related methods
Generated from the method graph and shown as machine-suggested relations — no evidence claim is inferred.