In this report, we learn how over the past decade, key members of the humanitarian sector in Jordan have been complicit in the creation and sustaining of refugee response framework that is partial, discriminant, and excludes the refugees and asylums seekers from Yemen, Sudan, Somalia, and Iraqi origin, leaving them with limited assistance, protection, or recognition of the rights and protections that should be ensured to them under the UN conventions. As the report unfolds, questions will naturally begin to come to the surface regarding what the story of the non-Syrians, the JRP, and the approaches of stakeholders involved tells us about the sector’s commitment to its principles and its willingness to truly commit to the cause of localization.