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Understanding Intersecting Vulnerabilities Experienced by Religious Minorities Living in Poverty in the Shadows of Covid-19

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posted on 2024-09-05, 21:51 authored by Joanna Howard, Oluwafunmilayo Para-Mallam, Plangsat Bitrus Dayil, Kachollom Best, Henry Mang, Dauda Abubakar, Rahina Muazu, Aishatu Sabo, Solomon Joshua, Siraj Saeel, Philip Hayab John, Chikas DanFulani Tsilpi, Christine Samuel, Katung John Kwasu, Hauwa Lawal Saulawa, Maryam Aliyu Yakassai, Kabiru Babangida, Abdulrahman Galla
The purpose of this study, conducted during the Covid-19 pandemic between November 2020 and March 2021 in India and Nigeria, is to explore the direct and indirect effects of Covid-19 on religiously marginalised groups experiencing intersecting vulnerabilities. The findings provide recognition of the impact of Covid-19 on targeting and encroachments faced by these groups in order to inform policy so that it includes their perspectives in building back better and promoting inclusive development. Policymakers need to understand both the direct and indirect impacts of Covid-19 in order to coordinate effective support and avert deepening marginalisation. This research demonstrates how religious inequalities intersect with other inequalities of power – historical, structural, and socially determined characteristics (class, ethnicity, caste, gender, age) – to shape how people experience the Covid-19 pandemic. Both India and Nigeria manifest high levels of authoritarianism, an absence of press freedom, targeting of religiously marginalised groups, and unequal access to public services and the protection of the state by religiously marginalised groups, according to geographic location. The findings of this report reveal the appalling everyday realities as well as the great courage of religious minorities living in poverty during the pandemic. Greater sensitivity to the critical intersection of vulnerabilities is essential for the longer-term recovery of these groups, who otherwise face slipping deeper into intergenerational poverty. Deepening poverty and proliferating ethno-religious injustices are fuelling tensions and conflict, and the risks of neglecting these issues are immense.

Funding

Department for International Development, UK Government

History

Publisher

Institute of Development Studies

Citation

Howard, J. et al (2021) Understanding Intersecting Vulnerabilities Experienced by Religious Minorities Living in Poverty in the Shadows of Covid-19, CREID Intersections Series; Religious Inequalities and Covid-19, Coalition for Religious Equality and Inclusive Development, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/CREID.2021.012

Series

CREID Intersections Series Religious Inequalities and Covid-19

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

IDS Item Types

Series paper (IDS)

Copyright holder

Institute of Development Studies

Country

Nigeria; India

Language

en

IDS team

Power and Popular Politics

Project identifier

Coalition for Religious Equality and Inclusive Development (CREID)::7a473ec6-92f8-49ff-98df-9ec27d8d5fe6::600

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    Coalition for Religious Equality and Inclusive Development (CREID)

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