Coping with Compounding Challenges in Conflict Crises

This paper analyzes how the intersectionality of gender, forced displacement, and collective violence shapes coping behaviors in conflict crises, paying particular attention to household composition by gender and age. Drawing on survey data from 17,951 individuals in North-east Nigeria, the analysis finds that coping behaviors at the household, adult, and child levels are interlinked and strongly shaped by compounding challenges stemming from individual gender, household forced displacement status, and local violence shocks. These challenges have significant welfare implications and create severe vulnerabilities and special needs for specific groups of households and individuals, such as rural communities affected by violence, large households with many children, female breadwinners, and displaced girls. The findings emphasize the need for and potential of concerted policy approaches that account for the intersectionality of gender, displacement, and violence in conflict settings and pay particular attention to specific types of communities, households, and individuals.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stojetz, Wolfgang, Brück, Tilman
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2023-03-29
Subjects:VIOLENT CONFLICT, GENDER, FORCED DISPLACEMENT, CONFLICT CRISIS, INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS, GENDER AND DISPLACEMENT, MOST VULNERABLE REFUGEE GROUPS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099424103272317155/IDU08c7cd15e0cd8a042390a3420a9ae6643ca4e
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/39616
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098639616
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986396162024-03-11T19:26:14Z Coping with Compounding Challenges in Conflict Crises Evidence from North-east Nigeria Stojetz, Wolfgang Brück, Tilman VIOLENT CONFLICT GENDER FORCED DISPLACEMENT CONFLICT CRISIS INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS GENDER AND DISPLACEMENT MOST VULNERABLE REFUGEE GROUPS This paper analyzes how the intersectionality of gender, forced displacement, and collective violence shapes coping behaviors in conflict crises, paying particular attention to household composition by gender and age. Drawing on survey data from 17,951 individuals in North-east Nigeria, the analysis finds that coping behaviors at the household, adult, and child levels are interlinked and strongly shaped by compounding challenges stemming from individual gender, household forced displacement status, and local violence shocks. These challenges have significant welfare implications and create severe vulnerabilities and special needs for specific groups of households and individuals, such as rural communities affected by violence, large households with many children, female breadwinners, and displaced girls. The findings emphasize the need for and potential of concerted policy approaches that account for the intersectionality of gender, displacement, and violence in conflict settings and pay particular attention to specific types of communities, households, and individuals. 2023-03-29T18:48:19Z 2023-03-29T18:48:19Z 2023-03-29 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099424103272317155/IDU08c7cd15e0cd8a042390a3420a9ae6643ca4e https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/39616 English en Policy Research Working Papers; 10379 CC BY 3.0 IGO https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
English
topic VIOLENT CONFLICT
GENDER
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
CONFLICT CRISIS
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS
GENDER AND DISPLACEMENT
MOST VULNERABLE REFUGEE GROUPS
VIOLENT CONFLICT
GENDER
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
CONFLICT CRISIS
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS
GENDER AND DISPLACEMENT
MOST VULNERABLE REFUGEE GROUPS
spellingShingle VIOLENT CONFLICT
GENDER
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
CONFLICT CRISIS
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS
GENDER AND DISPLACEMENT
MOST VULNERABLE REFUGEE GROUPS
VIOLENT CONFLICT
GENDER
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
CONFLICT CRISIS
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS
GENDER AND DISPLACEMENT
MOST VULNERABLE REFUGEE GROUPS
Stojetz, Wolfgang
Brück, Tilman
Coping with Compounding Challenges in Conflict Crises
description This paper analyzes how the intersectionality of gender, forced displacement, and collective violence shapes coping behaviors in conflict crises, paying particular attention to household composition by gender and age. Drawing on survey data from 17,951 individuals in North-east Nigeria, the analysis finds that coping behaviors at the household, adult, and child levels are interlinked and strongly shaped by compounding challenges stemming from individual gender, household forced displacement status, and local violence shocks. These challenges have significant welfare implications and create severe vulnerabilities and special needs for specific groups of households and individuals, such as rural communities affected by violence, large households with many children, female breadwinners, and displaced girls. The findings emphasize the need for and potential of concerted policy approaches that account for the intersectionality of gender, displacement, and violence in conflict settings and pay particular attention to specific types of communities, households, and individuals.
format Working Paper
topic_facet VIOLENT CONFLICT
GENDER
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
CONFLICT CRISIS
INTERNALLY DISPLACED PERSONS
GENDER AND DISPLACEMENT
MOST VULNERABLE REFUGEE GROUPS
author Stojetz, Wolfgang
Brück, Tilman
author_facet Stojetz, Wolfgang
Brück, Tilman
author_sort Stojetz, Wolfgang
title Coping with Compounding Challenges in Conflict Crises
title_short Coping with Compounding Challenges in Conflict Crises
title_full Coping with Compounding Challenges in Conflict Crises
title_fullStr Coping with Compounding Challenges in Conflict Crises
title_full_unstemmed Coping with Compounding Challenges in Conflict Crises
title_sort coping with compounding challenges in conflict crises
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2023-03-29
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099424103272317155/IDU08c7cd15e0cd8a042390a3420a9ae6643ca4e
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/39616
work_keys_str_mv AT stojetzwolfgang copingwithcompoundingchallengesinconflictcrises
AT brucktilman copingwithcompoundingchallengesinconflictcrises
AT stojetzwolfgang evidencefromnortheastnigeria
AT brucktilman evidencefromnortheastnigeria
_version_ 1794797314887385088