Socioeconomic Impact of the Crisis in North Mali on Displaced People [electronic resource] / Etang-Ndip, Alvin

By: Etang-Ndip, AlvinContributor(s): Etang-Ndip, Alvin | Hoogeveen, Johannes | Lendorfer, JuliaMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Washington, D.C., The World Bank, 2015Description: 1 online resource (32 p.)Subject(s): Armed Conflict | Education for All | Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) | Listening to Displaced People Survey (LDPS) | Population Policies | Post Conflict Reconstruction | Refugee Households | Social Cohesion | Street Children | Wealthy HouseholdsAdditional physical formats: Etang-Ndip, Alvin: Socioeconomic Impact of the Crisis in North Mali on Displaced People.Online resources: Click here to access online Abstract: This paper analyzes the impact of the 2012 crisis in Mali on internally displaced people, refugees and returnees. It uses information from a face-to-face household survey as well as follow-up interviews with its respondents via mobile phones. This combination was found to present a good and robust way to monitor the impact of conflict on hard-to-reach populations who at times live in areas inaccessible to enumerators. Results indicate that better educated and wealthier households as well as those exposed to less violence fled the crisis. Significant amounts of durable goods (20-60 percent) and animals (75-90 percent) were lost and the welfare of the displaced declined considerably as a result of the crisis. Yet over time its impact has diminished. By February 2015, most eligible children were going to school and employment levels and number of meals consumed were at pre-crisis levels. The paper finds that different ethnic groups chose different places of refuge. Depending on location, the narrative of the crisis and the solutions that are envisaged differ diametrically.
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This paper analyzes the impact of the 2012 crisis in Mali on internally displaced people, refugees and returnees. It uses information from a face-to-face household survey as well as follow-up interviews with its respondents via mobile phones. This combination was found to present a good and robust way to monitor the impact of conflict on hard-to-reach populations who at times live in areas inaccessible to enumerators. Results indicate that better educated and wealthier households as well as those exposed to less violence fled the crisis. Significant amounts of durable goods (20-60 percent) and animals (75-90 percent) were lost and the welfare of the displaced declined considerably as a result of the crisis. Yet over time its impact has diminished. By February 2015, most eligible children were going to school and employment levels and number of meals consumed were at pre-crisis levels. The paper finds that different ethnic groups chose different places of refuge. Depending on location, the narrative of the crisis and the solutions that are envisaged differ diametrically.

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