Acciones e investigaciones Sociales. Nº 47 (2026)
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82.4 million people had been displaced globally due to war, conflict, or persecution, with the Syrian
civil war standing as one of the most acute crises. Since 2011, more than half of Syria’s population—
around 13.5 million—has been uprooted, including 6.8 million seeking international protection abroad
(UNHCR, 2024). Owing to its geographical proximity, Turkey became the primary host country; by
December 31, 2024, nearly 2.9 million Syrians were registered under temporary protection (Tümtaş,
2022; Refugees Association, 2025). This study investigates how displaced Syrian women in Turkey
adapted livelihood strategies under new socio-economic realities, with particular attention to the
transformation of familial and occupational roles.
Vulnerable Refugee Women
By the end of 2023, nearly half of the 117.3 million forcibly displaced individuals were women,
underscoring the gendered dimensions of displacement (UNHCR, 2024). Across contexts such as
Eritrea, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine, and Venezuela, women face overlapping vulnerabilities in
health, livelihoods, and psychological well-being (Bekyol & Bendel, 2016; Freedman, 2016; Krause,
2015; Janmyr, 2017; Capasso et al., 2022; Collins & Daly, 2021; Mazhak, 2023). Gender-based violence
represents a persistent risk: women encounter sexual assault, trafficking, and exploitation along
migration routes and in camps (Freedman, 2016; Krause, 2015; Canning, 2020). Syrian women were
exposed to sexual violence from both regime forces and extremist groups (Freedman, 2016), while
displaced Ukrainian women also report high risks of abuse (Capasso et al., 2022). Building on these
security concerns, health outcomes are also deeply affected. Refugee women often suffer
reproductive complications, malnutrition, infectious diseases, PTSD, depression, and anxiety (Jolof et
al., 2022; Al-Shdayfat, 2017; Rubenstein et al., 2020). Collapsed healthcare systems, such as in
Afghanistan, increased maternal mortality (Bennett et al., 2004). Access to culturally sensitive mental
health services remains limited, particularly for survivors of sexual violence (Freedman, 2016).
Displacement further exacerbates socio-economic marginalization by stripping jobs, education, and
networks, pushing women into poverty (Borges, 2024; Bennett et al., 2004). Case studies illustrate
these intersections: in Sudan and South Sudan, women became breadwinners but also carried heavier
caregiving burdens (Saferworld, 2020). Educated Ukrainian women entered insecure, underqualified
jobs due to childcare (OECD, 2023). Syrian mothers reported children’s social exclusion compounding
family distress (Borges, 2024). Venezuelan women experienced discrimination, precarious work, and
trauma from violence (Collins & Daly, 2021). Collectively, these examples highlight displacement as a
structural and gendered crisis shaped by intersecting vulnerabilities of violence, poverty, health risks,
and exclusion.