Internal displacement remains one of the pressing current humanitarian and development challenges, with sub-Saharan Africa being the most affected region. Ethiopia is among the countries with the highest number of internally displaced persons (IDPs) primarily due to inter-ethnic conflicts and the lack of durable solutions to previous displacement situations. In the absence of institutional and legal frameworks dedicated to protecting IDPs, the federal and sub-national governments often implement return or resettlement based on emergency response systems construing displacement as a temporary shock. This adhocratic arrangements leave IDPs with a lot of burden to improve themselves in new socio-spatial contexts where they experience power imbalances in terms of access to space, social relations and representation. Drawing on an ethnographic study with ethnic Oromo people displaced from the Somali region of Ethiopia and resettled in urban settlements, I highlight their displacement experiences, the resettlement processes and translocal coping strategies. The constellation of mobility, translocal belonging and social-networks support IDPs’ means of living at different places. Further research is needed to unravel the extent to which these translocal practices address the needs created by displacement and resettlement.