Case: Syria

TENURE TYPE: use rights

INTERVENTION: non-structural rehabilitation of occupied shelters

TENURE DURATION: SHORT-TERM

Before the crisis, urbanization in Syrian Arab Republic (Syria) led to informal settlement growth, worsened by the scale of conflict-induced displacement since the crisis began. Large influxes of displaced communities settled in host communities with limited access to ownership documentation and a preference for verbal agreements, leading to ownership disputes and eviction. The shelter project aimed to provide non-structural rehabilitation of privately-owned buildings, but needed to confirm ownership, landlord permission and tenure security for project recipients.

Key actions

The assessment aimed to understand the complex stakeholder dynamics, how HLP rights were acquired, if documentation was available and how HLP disputes were resolved.

Through interviews with landlords and tenants/occupants, shelter actors identified who either owned or could authorize the use of the building and determined the risk-level of the building being disputed. This was then shared with the legal team to recommend the level of certainty to proceed.

Legal support analyzed applicable laws in the area and data collected from the HLP assessment was shared for team’s recommendation on level of certainty to proceed.