TY - BOOK AU - Finn,Anthony AU - Finn,Anthony TI - The Drivers of Reporter Reintegration in Northern Uganda T2 - Other papers PY - 2012/// CY - Washington, D.C. PB - The World Bank KW - Access to Finance KW - Access to Justice KW - Community-Driven Development KW - Conflict Resolution KW - Debt KW - Disabilities KW - Discrimination KW - Diversity KW - Economic Development KW - Educational Attainment KW - Females KW - Finance and Financial Sector Development KW - Food Security KW - Gender KW - Human Capital KW - Human Rights KW - Inheritance KW - International Organization For Migration KW - Land Tenure KW - Literacy KW - Mental Health KW - Savings KW - Skills Development and Labor Force Training KW - Social Capital KW - Social Cohesion KW - Social Development KW - Social Networks KW - Social Protections and Labor KW - Social Responsibility KW - Technical Assistance KW - Trauma KW - Villages KW - Vulnerable Groups KW - World Health Organization N2 - The World Bank commissioned this report as part of a set of studies concerned with the Uganda Demobilization and Reintegration Program and the Amnesty Commission. The study represents one element of the set of studies which included the Final Independent Evaluation of the Uganda Emergency Demobilization and Reintegration Project (UgDRP), Reporter Reintegration Survey and Community Dynamics Survey, and a study on the relationship between the Amnesty Commission and its DDR Implementing Partners study. The background field work and research for this study was integrated into the overall background research and fieldwork for the set of studies. In this study the focus of the analysis is on processes of reintegration rather than the achievement of a static marker of reintegration. In other words rather than examining the experience of reporters to identify the ones who are reintegrated and the ones who are not, the study examines the complex interplay of elements in the process of social and economic reintegration to identify which drivers have most influenced (positively and negatively) the reintegration process in which reporters are and have been engaged. The study identifies the drivers of successful or unsuccessful reintegration and the crosscutting dynamics such as gender, tradition, poverty and economic markets that exacerbate the impact of drivers of reintegration on the lives of reporters and communities. The report presents actionable findings that can inform future programming in the area. The overall purpose of the study is to provide an analysis of the drivers of reintegration and to identify the distinguishing features of successful reintegration amongst reporters UR - http://elibrary.worldbank.org/doi/book/10.1596/26807 ER -