My name is Saisha Vasudeva and I am a second-year Honours Economics student. I am extremely grateful to Mr. Garvin Brown for supporting me with my internship at the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Guatemala this summer as a recipient of the Susan Casey Brown Fund for ÎÛÎÛ²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ, ÎÛÎÛ²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ International Experience Awards.
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The Livelihoods and Economic Inclusion Unit at UNHCR Guatemala aims to help people who were forced to flee their homes and are now in a new community by advocating for their right to work, supporting their inclusion in government protection systems, and helping them gain access to work, entrepreneurship, and the labour markets. In such a manner, the unit strives to empower refugees to build strong economic and cultural ties with their host communities and lead independent lives.
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This opportunity over the past 3 months has been an extremely enriching and intellectually stimulating experience. I have explored the intersection of economics and development in the context of Guatemala and Latin America, which has furthered my interest in the realm of Developmental Economics. I have learnt a lot about refugee crises, asylum seekers, and internally displaced persons through a series of various training courses to better understand the role of the UN, and more specifically that of the UNHCR. I have learnt how to register refugee data into proGres, the refugee database management system and have also understood how to measure the auto sufficiency of refugees using the Self-Reliance Index (SRI). I had the opportunity to hone my coding and quantitative data analysis skills by using R to understand the SRI scores of different population groups and whether certain characteristics such as health, income, and job opportunities differ across refugees and internally displaced persons. Additionally, I was also given the opportunity to interact with colleagues at the Cash Based Interventions Unit to understand how cash/ vouchers are given to refugees to foster financial inclusion.Ìý
Moreover, working in Guatemala has given me the opportunity to hone my Spanish speaking and communication skills. Understanding a new dialect, a new pace of speech, and diving into a new language every day at work was truly an experience like no other. Overall, this internship has had a huge impact on me and has given me great insight to the application of economics to the real world in a developing area. It has driven me to think about the ways in which economic inclusion can be fostered and has reinforced my interest in pursuing a career at the intersection of economics and humanitarian work.Ìý
Thank you to the ÎÛÎÛ²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ International Experience Awards founders and Mr. Garvin Brown for making this experience possible and for your generous support!