0 to (be helped or forced to) move to another place to live:
His family originally came from Ireland, but resettled in the US in the 19th century.
The US government forcibly resettled the Native Americans in reservations.
Most farmers would not need to resettle because the new lands are at commuting distances from the villages.
It stipulated that 150,000 hectares should be acquired with a view to resettling 14,000 people by the year 2000.
The exchange implicitly prices the performance guarantee by requiring that traders post a margin and resettle at regular intervals.
Unsettledness at three months was most strongly associated with prior worries about being resettled, living alone, managing money, and problems with co-tenants in congregate housing.
Commercial farms all around the lake and its surrounding recreational park were occupied in 2000-01, and most have now been resettled.
During the first six months after being resettled, 10 renewed family contacts, including a few who had been homeless for years.
Some of these have spent many years in long-stay institutions and may have been resettled into alternative accommodation.
To refuse to allow its citizens to resettle in their own country would have political costs.