posted on 2024-09-05, 23:19authored byPatricia Justino
transmission linking civil war and poverty that may lead to the persistence of cycles of
poverty and war. A particular focus of the paper is the notion of individual (and group) agency
during civil wars, as well as agency constraints faced by populations affected by violence.
Although the outbreak and impact of war is known to depend on several financial and
political factors, the onset, duration and magnitude of the impact of civil wars are also closely
related to what happens to people during violent conflicts and to what people do in areas of
violence to secure livelihoods, economic survival, physical security and their social networks.
The nature and extent of these choices depends in turn on how individuals and households
relate to changes in social norms and forms of institutional organisation during civil wars. The
paper explores the economic channels through which war may simultaneously affect and be
affected by the economic status and responses of individuals and their immediate relations in
areas of violent conflict to cope with and adapt to changes to livelihoods and economic status
during civil wars. This analysis focuses in particular on the important but under-researched
role of social and political institutional transformation during civil war on individual and
household poverty.
Keywords: civil war; household poverty; violent conflict; livelihoods; institutional
transformation.
History
Publisher
IDS
Citation
Justino, P. (2012) War and poverty. Working paper series, 391. Brighton: IDS.