3480 lines
182 KiB
BibTeX
3480 lines
182 KiB
BibTeX
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@article{2019,
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title = {Business Officials Confirm Trade Zone in {{Djibouti}} Underway},
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date = {2019},
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journaltitle = {Jordan times (Amman, Jordan)},
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publisher = {{Tribune Content Agency}},
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copyright = {COPYRIGHT 2019 Jordan Times},
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langid = {english},
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}
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@article{Aden2019,
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title = {The role of Ports and Free Zones in the Development of Africa: The
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“Djibouti Model”},
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author = {Aden, Mowlid},
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date = {2019},
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journaltitle = {Réalités industrielles},
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volume = {Novembre 2019},
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number = {4},
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pages = {105--109},
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publisher = {{F.F.E}},
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location = {{Paris}},
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issn = {1148-7941},
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doi = {10.3917/rindu1.194.0105},
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abstract = {This article is essentially a positive story of ports \& free
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zones-led progress. Why are ports so critical? A well-organized
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port can make the difference between locally or, in the case of
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Djibouti, regionally produced products being viable for export,
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or priced out of the market 1 . A well-run facility builds
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self-reliance in the local executive management and economy, thus
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drawing new industry and investment, and promoting tourism.
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Furthermore, enhancements to port infrastructure frequently raise
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forces to shore up the weaker links in regional supply chains,
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such as below-standard roads and railways 2 .},
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copyright = {Copyright La Francaise de Financement et d'Edition (FFE) Nov
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2019},
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langid = {eng ; fre},
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file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/TSPFYLEQ/RINDU1_194_0105.pdf},
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}
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@article{Alia2017,
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title = {Progress {{Toward The Sustainable Development Goal}} on {{Poverty}}
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: {{Assessing The Effect}} of {{Income Growth}} on {{The Exit Time}}
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from {{Poverty}} in {{Benin}}: {{Exit Time Out}} of {{Poverty}} in {
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{Benin}}},
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shorttitle = {Progress {{Toward The Sustainable Development Goal}} on {{
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Poverty}}},
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author = {Alia, Didier Yelognisse},
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date = {2017-11},
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journaltitle = {Sustainable Development},
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shortjournal = {Sust. Dev.},
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volume = {25},
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number = {6},
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pages = {495--503},
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issn = {09680802},
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doi = {10.1002/sd.1674},
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langid = {english},
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keywords = {country::Benin,inequality::income,status::skimmed,topic::poverty
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},
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file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/5NKMQYPC/Alia2017_Progress Toward The
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Sustainable Development Goal on Poverty.pdf},
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}
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@book{Asaba2013,
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title = {Gender, Power and Local Water Governance in Rural {{Uganda}}},
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author = {Asaba, Richard Bagonza},
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date = {2013},
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publisher = {{National University of Ireland, Maynooth (Ireland)}},
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keywords = {country::Uganda,irrelevant::thesis,topic::water},
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file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/WRASMP5W/Asaba2013_Gender, power and
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local water governance in rural Uganda.pdf},
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}
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@report{Atamanov2022,
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title = {Uganda {{Poverty Assessment}}: {{Strengthening Resilience}} to {{
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Accelerate Poverty Reduction}}},
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author = {{World Bank}},
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date = {2022},
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institution = {{World Bank}},
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location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
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url = {
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http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099135006292235162/P17761605286900b10899b0798dcd703d85
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},
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abstract = {The share of Uganda’s population that lives below the poverty
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line has fluctuated over the last seven years, greatly influenced
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by shocks that have tested the resilience of the people. About 30
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percent of the country’s population was poor in 2019-20, which is
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comparable to the poverty rate of 30.7 percent in 2012-13. The
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pattern of fluctuating poverty rates is largely driven by the
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experience of rural households. There was a surge in the poverty
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rate between 2012-13 and 2016-17, linked to the drought in
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2016-17, followed by improvement in 2019-20 prior to the pandemic
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, when favorable weather conditions helped lift rural incomes.
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The COVID-19 pandemic pushed both urban and rural residents into
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poverty. Inequality, which reflects the extent to which different
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population groups benefit from Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
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growth, and affects the transmission of growth into poverty
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reduction, remained largely unchanged over this period and may
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even have worsened in urban areas. The rest of this overview
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presents key findings of the report. The next section synthesizes
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key facts about Uganda’s poverty reduction experience up to 2020.
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These facts set the stage for the section that follows examining
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reasons behind limited progress in poverty reduction. The final
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section reviews the key policy points for action. The report’s
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analysis is based on new analysis of available data sources as
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well as published analytical reports such as the Systematic
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Country Diagnostic Update (World Bank; International Finance
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Corporation; Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency 2021), the
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Country Economic Memorandum (World Bank 2022), and the previous
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Poverty Assessment (World Bank 2016).},
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editora = {Atamanov, Aziz Malasquez and Carbonel, Eduardo Alonso and Masaki,
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Takaaki and Myers, Cara Ann Granguillhome and Ochoa, Rogelio and
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Sinha, Nistha},
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editoratype = {collaborator},
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keywords = {country::Uganda,status::skimmed},
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file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/DI29L2WE/Atamanov2022_Uganda Poverty
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Assessment.pdf},
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}
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@article{Bako2021,
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title = {Towards Attaining the Recommended {{Humanitarian Sphere Standards}}
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of Sanitation in {{Bidibidi}} Refugee Camp Found in {{Yumbe District
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}}, {{Uganda}}},
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author = {Bako, Zaitun and Barakagira, Alex and Nabukonde, Ameria},
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date = {2021-12},
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journaltitle = {Journal of International Humanitarian Action},
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shortjournal = {Int J Humanitarian Action},
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volume = {6},
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number = {1},
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pages = {17},
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issn = {2364-3412, 2364-3404},
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doi = {10.1186/s41018-021-00105-8},
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abstract = {Abstract Adequate sanitation is one of the most important
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aspects of community well-being. It reduces the rates of
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morbidity and severity of various diseases like diarrhea,
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dysentery, and typhoid among others. A study about toward the
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attainment of the recommended Humanitarian Sphere Standards on
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sanitation in Bidibidi refugee camp, Yumbe District, was
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initiated. A total of 210 households distributed in Bidibidi
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refugee camp were randomly selected and one adult person
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interviewed to assess the accessibility of different sanitation
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facilities, and to explore the sanitation standards of the
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sanitation facilities in relation to the recommended Humanitarian
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Sphere Standards in the area. Pit latrines, hand washing
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facilities, and solid waste disposal areas as reported by 81.4\%,
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86.7\%, and 51.9\% of the respondents respectively, are the main
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sanitation facilities accessed in the refugee camp. Despite their
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accessibility, the standards of the pit latrines, hand washing,
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and solid waste disposal facilities are below the recommended
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standards, which might have contributed to the outbreak of
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sanitation related diseases (χ 2 = 19.66, df = 1, P = 0.05) in
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Bidibidi refugee camp. The respondents in the study area were
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aware that the presence of the sanitation-related diseases was
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because of the low-level sanitation practices in place (χ 2 =
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4.54, df = 1, P = 0.05). The inaccessibility to some sanitation
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facilities by some respondents was found to be related to their
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low level of education (χ 2 = 130.37, df = 1, P = 0.05). This
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implies that the sanitation facilities in Bidibidi refugee camp
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need to be redesigned and improved especially the pit latrines
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and the solid waste disposal facilities in order to meet the
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minimum Humanitarian Sphere Standards. Also, there should be more
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provision of taps with flowing water in the camp for effective
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washing practices to minimize the spread of sanitation-related
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diseases.},
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langid = {english},
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keywords = {country::Uganda,topic::refugee,topic::water},
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file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/C8A3WUM2/Bako2021_Towards attaining the
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recommended Humanitarian Sphere Standards of sanitation.pdf},
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}
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@article{Barry2020,
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title = {Pay-as-You-Go Contracts for Electricity Access: {{Bridging}} the
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“Last Mile” Gap? {{A}} Case Study in {{Benin}}},
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shorttitle = {Pay-as-You-Go Contracts for Electricity Access},
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author = {Barry, Mamadou Saliou and Creti, Anna},
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date = {2020-08},
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journaltitle = {Energy Economics},
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shortjournal = {Energy Economics},
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volume = {90},
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pages = {104843},
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issn = {01409883},
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doi = {10.1016/j.eneco.2020.104843},
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langid = {english},
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keywords = {country::Benin,status::skimmed,topic::electricity,topic::rural},
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file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/BERQHNQT/Barry2020_Pay-as-you-go
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contracts for electricity access.pdf},
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}
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@article{Baulch2012,
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title = {Decomposing the {{Ethnic Gap}} in {{Rural Vietnam}}, 1993–2004},
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author = {Baulch, Bob and Pham, Hung T. and Reilly, Barry},
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date = {2012-03},
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journaltitle = {Oxford Development Studies},
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shortjournal = {Oxford Development Studies},
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volume = {40},
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number = {1},
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pages = {87--117},
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issn = {1360-0818, 1469-9966},
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doi = {10.1080/13600818.2011.646441},
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langid = {english},
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keywords = {inequality::ethnicity,status::skimmed,topic::rural},
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file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/K4W8VPTE/Baulch2012_Decomposing the
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Ethnic Gap in Rural Vietnam, 1993–2004.pdf},
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}
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@incollection{Benjamin2004,
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title = {Agriculture and Income Distribution in Rural {{Vietnam}} under
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Economic Reforms: A Tale of Two Regions},
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booktitle = {Economic {{Growth}}, {{Poverty}} and {{Household Welfare}} in {
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{Vietnam}}},
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author = {Benjamin, Dwayne and Brandt, Loren},
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editor = {Glewwe, Paul and Agrawal, Nisha and Dollar, David},
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date = {2004},
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pages = {133--186},
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publisher = {{World Bank}},
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location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
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abstract = {https://books.google.de/books?id=jRSuIH1tVqEC\&
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printsec=frontcover\#v=onepage\&q\&f=false},
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keywords = {inequality::income,topic::modernization,
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topic::trade_liberalization},
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}
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@article{Benjamin2017,
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title = {Growth with Equity: Income Inequality in {{Vietnam}}, 2002–14},
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shorttitle = {Growth with Equity},
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author = {Benjamin, Dwayne and Brandt, Loren and McCaig, Brian},
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date = {2017-03},
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journaltitle = {The Journal of Economic Inequality},
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||
shortjournal = {J Econ Inequal},
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volume = {15},
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number = {1},
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||
pages = {25--46},
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||
issn = {1569-1721, 1573-8701},
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||
doi = {10.1007/s10888-016-9341-7},
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||
langid = {english},
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||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,index::Gini,index::Theil,inequality::income,
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||
status::read,topic::equity},
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||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/FQJMZJSG/Benjamin2017_Growth with
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||
equity.pdf},
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||
}
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@article{Bereketeab2016,
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title = {Djibouti: {{Strategic}} Location, an Asset or a Curse?},
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||
author = {Bereketeab, Redie},
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||
date = {2016},
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||
journaltitle = {Journal of African Foreign Affairs},
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||
volume = {3},
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||
number = {1/2},
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||
pages = {5--18},
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||
publisher = {{Adonis \& Abbey Publishers Ltd}},
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||
location = {{London}},
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||
issn = {2056-564X},
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||
abstract = {This article examines the costs and benefits of the strategic
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location of Djibouti. It is located in a strategic shipping lane
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where annually some 20 000 ships and 30 percent of world trade
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pass through. In addition, Djibouti is found pressed between two
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highly conflicted regions, notably the Horn of Africa and Gulf
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||
region, which from a security point of view, harnesses its global
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strategic importance. Nevertheless, this strategic location and
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importance that it draws is not only positive. It has also
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negative implication to the nation as well as the region in the
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long term. The article seeks to analyse the positive and negative
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implication to the country as well as the region induced by the
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sudden surge of strategic significance of Djibouti. It concludes,
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besides the economic and security benefits Djibouti gains, in the
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long term, the militarisation may bring dire political, social,
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security, stability, democratisation consequences to the region.
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The data for this article were collected through interviews,
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personal observation and secondary material.},
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copyright = {Copyright Adonis \& Abbey Publishers Ltd Jun-Dec 2016},
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langid = {english},
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file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/J6Z53UN5/Bereketeab2016_Djibouti.pdf},
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}
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@article{Brass2008,
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title = {Djibouti's Unusual Resource Curse},
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author = {Brass, Jennifer N.},
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date = {2008-12},
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journaltitle = {The Journal of Modern African Studies},
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||
shortjournal = {J. Mod. Afr. Stud.},
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volume = {46},
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||
number = {4},
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||
pages = {523--545},
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issn = {0022-278X, 1469-7777},
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||
doi = {10.1017/S0022278X08003479},
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abstract = {ABSTRACT An extensive literature on the ‘resource curse’ posits
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that abundant natural resources ‘curse’ countries possessing them
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with negative economic, social and political externalities.
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Usually, scholars identify tangible resources like oil, diamonds
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or timber, rarely questioning whether other kinds of resources
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might have the same impact, and under what conditions. This paper
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examines how little-studied Djibouti's non-tangible resources~–~
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geo-strategic location and aid-inspiring poverty~–~have produced
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‘curse’ effects; with an economy dominated by US and French
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military spending (and concomitant aid) and rents on trade
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passing to and from Ethiopia, tiny Djibouti suffers from this
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curse. It draws four conclusions. First, resource curse effects
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can derive from non-traditional sources. Second, leaders' policy
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decisions matter at least as much as the presence or absence of
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resources. Third, advanced countries' spending patterns in their
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less-developed allies often produce unintended consequences.
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Finally, even tiny countries can provide scholars and policy
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makers with new insights.},
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langid = {english},
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||
keywords = {country::Djibouti,status::skimmed,topic::modernization,
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||
topic::poverty,topic::trade_liberalization},
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||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/X6YSKQYR/Brass2008_Djibouti's unusual
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resource curse.pdf},
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}
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@article{Brunori2018,
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||
title = {Consumption Dynamics and Inequality of Opportunity with an
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Application to {{Uganda}}},
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||
author = {Brunori, Paolo and Palmisano, Flaviana and Peragine, Vito},
|
||
date = {2018},
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||
journaltitle = {Review of development economics},
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||
volume = {22},
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||
number = {2},
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||
pages = {632--657},
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||
publisher = {{Wiley Subscription Services, Inc}},
|
||
location = {{Oxford}},
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||
issn = {1363-6669},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/rode.12357},
|
||
abstract = {This paper proposes the adoption of an opportunity egalitarian
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||
perspective to assess and compare growth processes and their
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||
distributional implications. To this aim, a set of graphical
|
||
tools are introduced that allow one to evaluate the role of
|
||
growth and recessions in the evolution of individuals’
|
||
opportunities over time. These tools satisfy the ex post
|
||
principle of equality of opportunity and represent an extension
|
||
of the “opportunity growth incidence curve,” a framework proposed
|
||
by the literature to evaluate growth according to the ex ante
|
||
principle of equality of opportunity. This measurement framework
|
||
is applied to evaluate the economic dynamic between 2009 and 2011
|
||
in Uganda. The results show that despite a reduction in the real
|
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value of household consumption and a surge in outcome inequality,
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its effects appear to be less dramatic when the ex post equality
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of opportunity perspective is invoked.},
|
||
copyright = {2017 John Wiley \& Sons Ltd},
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||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::ethnicity,inequality::income,
|
||
status::read,topic::consumption},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/KYBLB9YI/Brunori2018_Consumption dynamics
|
||
and inequality of opportunity with an application to Uganda.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Bui2019,
|
||
title = {Determinants of {{Rural-Urban Inequality}} in {{Vietnam}}: {{
|
||
Detailed Decomposition Analyses Based}} on {{Unconditional Quantile
|
||
Regressions}}},
|
||
shorttitle = {Determinants of {{Rural-Urban Inequality}} in {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Bui, Thanh P. and Imai, Katsushi S.},
|
||
date = {2019-12-02},
|
||
journaltitle = {The Journal of Development Studies},
|
||
shortjournal = {The Journal of Development Studies},
|
||
volume = {55},
|
||
number = {12},
|
||
pages = {2610--2625},
|
||
issn = {0022-0388, 1743-9140},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/00220388.2018.1536265},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::rural,status::read,topic::rural,
|
||
topic::urban},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/7GHFRSL8/Bui2019_Determinants of
|
||
Rural-Urban Inequality in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Bui2020,
|
||
title = {Multidimensional {{Inequality}} in {{Vietnam}}, 2002–2012},
|
||
author = {Bui, Thi Kim Thanh and Erreygers, Guido},
|
||
date = {2020-04-05},
|
||
journaltitle = {Economies},
|
||
shortjournal = {Economies},
|
||
volume = {8},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
pages = {29},
|
||
issn = {2227-7099},
|
||
doi = {10.3390/economies8020029},
|
||
abstract = {We investigate the evolution of multidimensional inequality of
|
||
well-being in Vietnam in the period 2002–2012 using household
|
||
survey data. Our study focuses on four crucial dimensions of
|
||
human welfare: consumption, education, health and housing. We
|
||
measure inequality by means of the multidimensional Atkinson
|
||
index, which belongs to the Atkinson family of relative
|
||
inequality indices. The choice of the values of two crucial
|
||
parameters, with respect to the aversion to inequality on the one
|
||
hand and the degree of substitutability between dimensions on the
|
||
other hand, has a significant influence on the perceived trends
|
||
of inequality. We consider different combinations of dimensions
|
||
(two, three and four dimensions) and a wide variety of values of
|
||
the parameters, with the aim of arriving at a robust
|
||
understanding of the extent of inequality in Vietnam. Our results
|
||
suggest that the level of multidimensional inequality in Vietnam
|
||
has decreased, albeit that this is not the case for all
|
||
combinations of the parameter values. Our study shows that
|
||
looking at multidimensional rather than one-dimensional
|
||
inequality leads to a richer understanding of the evolution of
|
||
inequality, and indicates that it is important to be aware of the
|
||
influence of value judgments on the assessment of inequality.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,index::Atkinson,inequality::education,
|
||
inequality::health,inequality::housing,topic::consumption,
|
||
topic::education,topic::health,topic::housing},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/IXPIBKJR/Bui2020_Multidimensional
|
||
Inequality in Vietnam, 2002–2012.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Calderon-Villarreal2022,
|
||
title = {Social and Geographic Inequalities in Water, Sanitation and Hygiene
|
||
Access in 21 Refugee Camps and Settlements in {{Bangladesh}}, {{
|
||
Kenya}}, {{Uganda}}, {{South Sudan}}, and {{Zimbabwe}}},
|
||
author = {Calderón-Villarreal, Alhelí and Schweitzer, Ryan and Kayser,
|
||
Georgia},
|
||
date = {2022-12},
|
||
journaltitle = {International Journal for Equity in Health},
|
||
shortjournal = {Int J Equity Health},
|
||
volume = {21},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {27},
|
||
issn = {1475-9276},
|
||
doi = {10.1186/s12939-022-01626-3},
|
||
abstract = {Abstract Introduction Many refugees face challenges accessing
|
||
water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services. However, there is
|
||
limited literature on WASH access for refugee populations,
|
||
including for menstrual health services. Unmet WASH access needs
|
||
may therefore be hidden, amplifying morbidity and mortality risks
|
||
for already vulnerable refugee populations. The aim of this study
|
||
was therefore to quantitatively analyze WASH access among refugee
|
||
camps, with a focus on households with women of reproductive age.
|
||
Methods This was a cross-sectional study that utilized the
|
||
Standardized WASH Knowledge, Attitude and Practice (KAP) Survey.
|
||
A total of 5632 household questionnaires were completed by the
|
||
United Nations Refugee Agency in 2019 in 21 refugee camps and
|
||
settlements in Bangladesh, Kenya, South Sudan, Uganda, and
|
||
Zimbabwe. WASH access (14 items) and social and geographic
|
||
stratifiers were analyzed at the household-level including the
|
||
refugee camp, country of the settlement, having women of
|
||
reproductive age, members with disability/elderly status, and
|
||
household size. We calculated frequencies, odds ratios, and
|
||
performed bivariate and multivariate analyses to measure
|
||
inequalities. We developed a Female WASH Access Index to
|
||
characterize WASH access for households with women of
|
||
reproductive age. Results Most refugee households had high levels
|
||
of access to improved water (95\%), low levels of access to waste
|
||
disposal facility (64\%) and sanitation privacy (63\%), and very
|
||
low access to basic sanitation (30\%) and hand hygiene facility
|
||
(24\%). 76\% of households with women of reproductive age had
|
||
access to menstrual health materials. WASH access indicators and
|
||
the Female WASH Access Index showed large inequalities across
|
||
social and geographic stratifiers. Households with disabled or
|
||
elderly members, and fewer members had poorer WASH access.
|
||
Households with women of reproductive age had lower access to
|
||
basic sanitation. Conclusions Large inequalities in WASH access
|
||
indicators were identified between refugee sites and across
|
||
countries, in all metrics. We found high levels of access to
|
||
improved water across most of the refugee camps and settlements
|
||
studied. Access to basic hygiene and sanitation, sanitation
|
||
privacy, waste disposal, and menstrual health materials, could be
|
||
improved across refugee sites. Households with women of
|
||
reproductive age, with 4+ members, and without members with
|
||
disability/elderly status were associated with higher WASH
|
||
access. The female WASH access index piloted here could be a
|
||
useful tool to quickly summarize WASH access in households with
|
||
women of reproductive age.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Bangladesh,country::Kenya,country::South Sudan,
|
||
country::Uganda,status::skimmed,topic::refugee,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/HXMCVQ5J/Calderon-Villarreal2022_Social
|
||
and geographic inequalities in water, sanitation and hygiene access
|
||
in.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Cali2014,
|
||
title = {Trade Boom and Wage Inequality: Evidence from {{Ugandan}} Districts
|
||
},
|
||
shorttitle = {Trade Boom and Wage Inequality},
|
||
author = {Cali, M.},
|
||
date = {2014-11-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {Journal of Economic Geography},
|
||
shortjournal = {Journal of Economic Geography},
|
||
volume = {14},
|
||
number = {6},
|
||
pages = {1141--1174},
|
||
issn = {1468-2702, 1468-2710},
|
||
doi = {10.1093/jeg/lbu001},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::income,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::education,topic::trade_liberalization},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/MPYD83JI/Cali2014_Trade boom and wage
|
||
inequality.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Canagarajah2001,
|
||
title = {Non-Farm Income, Gender, and Inequality: Evidence from Rural {{
|
||
Ghana}} and {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Canagarajah, S and Newman, C and Bhattamishra, R},
|
||
date = {2001},
|
||
journaltitle = {Food policy},
|
||
series = {Food Policy},
|
||
volume = {26},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
pages = {405--420},
|
||
publisher = {{Elsevier Ltd}},
|
||
issn = {0306-9192},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/S0306-9192(01)00011-2},
|
||
abstract = {This paper examines how the distribution of earnings in rural
|
||
Ghana and Uganda differs by income type and by gender. We find
|
||
that non-farm earnings contribute to rising inequality, but that
|
||
lower income groups also benefit due to strong overall growth in
|
||
non-farm earnings. The inequality-inducing effect is driven by
|
||
self-employment income; wage income, on the other hand, reduces
|
||
inequality. The tendency of non-farm income to contribute to
|
||
inequality is greater among female-headed households for whom
|
||
self-employment is important and non-farm opportunities more
|
||
constrained. Determinants of non-farm income are estimated and
|
||
appear to be strongly related to location, education, age, and
|
||
distance to market. Estimates of the linkages to agriculture in
|
||
Ghana are weaker than expected, showing the non-farm sector to be
|
||
functioning more as an alternative activity to agriculture than
|
||
as a complement.},
|
||
copyright = {2001 Elsevier Science Ltd},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::income,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::agriculture,topic::gender,topic::modernization},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/JKRD3UJR/Canagarajah2001_Non-farm income,
|
||
gender, and inequality.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{Cao2008,
|
||
title = {Urban and Rural Dimensions of Income Inequality in Vietnam},
|
||
author = {Cao, Thi Cam Van and Akita, Takahiro},
|
||
date = {2008},
|
||
series = {Economic {{Development}} \& {{Policy Series}}},
|
||
institution = {{GSIR}},
|
||
keywords = {inequality::income,inequality::rural,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::agriculture,topic::modernization,
|
||
topic::trade_liberalization},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/EXXELF4W/Cao2008_Urban and rural
|
||
dimensions of income inequality in vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Cling2009,
|
||
title = {The Distributive Impact of {{Vietnam}}'s Accession to the {{WTO}}:},
|
||
shorttitle = {The Distributive Impact of {{Vietnam}}'s Accession to the {{
|
||
WTO}}},
|
||
author = {Cling, Jean-Pierre and Marouani, Mohamed Ali and Razafindrakoto,
|
||
Mireille and Robilliard, Anne-Sophie and Roubaud, François},
|
||
date = {2009-11-02},
|
||
journaltitle = {Économie internationale},
|
||
volume = {n° 118},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
pages = {43--71},
|
||
issn = {1240-8093},
|
||
doi = {10.3917/ecoi.118.0043},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,topic::trade_liberalization},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Cooper2016,
|
||
title = {Rural Household Vulnerability to Climate Risk in {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Cooper, Sarah Jane and Wheeler, Tim},
|
||
date = {2016},
|
||
journaltitle = {Regional environmental change},
|
||
volume = {17},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
pages = {649--663},
|
||
publisher = {{Springer Berlin Heidelberg}},
|
||
location = {{Berlin/Heidelberg}},
|
||
issn = {1436-3798},
|
||
doi = {10.1007/s10113-016-1049-5},
|
||
abstract = {Vulnerability assessment is fundamental for informing adaptation
|
||
to climate change policy. The aim of this study is to evaluate
|
||
the vulnerability of rural subsistence farmers in Uganda to
|
||
climate risk. A mixed methods approach used semi-structured and
|
||
guided interviews, and participatory techniques to explore
|
||
perception, livelihood response and socio-economic status.
|
||
Perception of climate risk varied, with wealthier farmers
|
||
perceiving drought as highest risk, whilst poorer farmers
|
||
perceived extreme heavy rainfall. Farmers implemented many
|
||
general livelihood coping and anticipatory responses (54.7 \%) to
|
||
perceived impacts from drought, rainfall variability and extreme
|
||
heavy rainfall. Examples included food storage, livestock
|
||
maintenance and planting drought-resistant varieties. Other
|
||
responses (45.3 \%) were specific to individual climatic events,
|
||
and farmers had no response to cope with rainfall variability.
|
||
Climate risk was not the only driver of vulnerability. Soil
|
||
infertility, pests and diseases, and economic instability also
|
||
sustained decreasing trends in income. Adaptive capacity of
|
||
households differed with external and internal attributes of
|
||
sensitivity. Farmers with more land, education, access to
|
||
governmental extension, a non-farm livelihood, larger households
|
||
and older age had more capacity to buffer shock through increased
|
||
assets and entitlements than poorer farmers who were more likely
|
||
to engage in opportunistic behaviour like casual labouring. Few
|
||
livelihood responses associated with perceived threat from the
|
||
climate indicating response to a broader range of stressors.
|
||
Conclusions determined inequality in livelihood response as a
|
||
fundamental driver in households’ ability to cope and adapt to
|
||
climate risk.},
|
||
copyright = {Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2016},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::environmental,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::climate_change},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/8WPKV5IC/Cooper2016_Rural household
|
||
vulnerability to climate risk in Uganda.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@incollection{Coutard2016,
|
||
title = {Is the Network Challenged by the Pragmatic Turn in {{African}}
|
||
Cities? {{Urban}} Transition and Hybrid Delivery Configurations},
|
||
booktitle = {Beyond the Networked City: Infrastructure Reconfigurations and
|
||
Urban Change in the {{North}} and {{South}}},
|
||
editor = {Coutard, Olivier and Rutherford, Jonathan and Jaglin, Sylvy},
|
||
date = {2016},
|
||
pages = {182--203},
|
||
url = {http://site.ebrary.com/id/11136788},
|
||
urldate = {2022-08-18},
|
||
isbn = {978-1-317-63369-3 978-1-315-75761-2 978-0-315-75761-5
|
||
978-1-138-30837-4 978-1-317-63370-9},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,irrelevant::full-text,topic::electricity,
|
||
topic::modernization,topic::urban},
|
||
annotation = {OCLC: 933265634},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/KT78QSG5/2016_Is the network challenged
|
||
by the pragmatic turn in African cities.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Dang2019,
|
||
title = {Does {{Horizontal Inequality Matter}} in {{Vietnam}}?},
|
||
author = {Dang, Thi Thu Hoai},
|
||
date = {2019-10},
|
||
journaltitle = {Social Indicators Research},
|
||
shortjournal = {Soc Indic Res},
|
||
volume = {145},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
pages = {943--956},
|
||
issn = {0303-8300, 1573-0921},
|
||
doi = {10.1007/s11205-018-1896-1},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::ethnicity,inequality::horizontal,
|
||
inequality::regional},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/RIVNVNEQ/Dang2019_Does Horizontal
|
||
Inequality Matter in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Datzberger2018,
|
||
title = {Why Education Is Not Helping the Poor. {{Findings}} from {{Uganda}}
|
||
},
|
||
author = {Datzberger, Simone},
|
||
date = {2018},
|
||
journaltitle = {World development},
|
||
volume = {110},
|
||
pages = {124--139},
|
||
publisher = {{Elsevier Ltd}},
|
||
issn = {0305-750X},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.worlddev.2018.05.022},
|
||
abstract = {•Education policies, reforms and governance failed to respond to
|
||
the multidimensional needs of the poor.•Assimilative models are
|
||
not responsive to the root causes of poverty to really affect
|
||
social transformation and change.•There is a need for
|
||
transformative policies that are cross-sectoral and not just
|
||
designed for the education sector alone.•The political economy
|
||
context of a country cannot be detached from education sector
|
||
reforms.•The focus on economic empowerment through education
|
||
sidelines the role of enhancing the political agency of the poor.
|
||
Education emerged as a nearly uncontested development strategy to
|
||
tackle several forms of social, political, economic and
|
||
geographic inequalities in low- and middle-income countries. When
|
||
it comes to the case of Uganda, the country represents a striking
|
||
paradox. Significant investments and policy reforms in education
|
||
(such as Universal Primary and Secondary Education) since 1997,
|
||
did not translate into the expected results with regards to
|
||
poverty reduction through human capital investment. Progress in
|
||
poverty alleviation is not only stagnant but the role of
|
||
education therein can be described as ‘modest’ at best. Against
|
||
this backdrop, this article assesses the following research
|
||
question: Why did Uganda’s investments and policy reforms in
|
||
education not uplift the poor? In examining the issue, this
|
||
article introduces a theoretical framework that contrasts
|
||
assimilative with transformative approaches in poverty
|
||
alleviation through education. A rigorous review of Uganda’s
|
||
education sector plans revealed that current strategies to reduce
|
||
poverty revolve around a strong assimilation-based development
|
||
agenda, thereby focusing on three main areas of intervention: (a)
|
||
increased access to education and retention; (b) improved quality
|
||
of education; and (c) employment generation through education.
|
||
The article finds that these assimilative approaches do not have
|
||
an impact on the political, economic and social structures that
|
||
cause poverty in the first place. Hence, it concludes that
|
||
assimilative models in education are highly dependent on
|
||
transformative approaches. Concretely, change cannot emerge only
|
||
at the very grassroots level, i.e. through educating society at
|
||
large, but also has to arise from the systemic level, i.e.
|
||
government institutions at the local, national and global levels.
|
||
Methodologically, the analysis draws on qualitative data that was
|
||
collected in the course of two extensive field research stays in
|
||
2015 and 2017. In addition, quantitative data in the form of
|
||
statistical abstracts inform the analysis.},
|
||
copyright = {2018 Elsevier Ltd},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::education,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/5LNQ7X6P/Datzberger2018_Why education is
|
||
not helping the poor.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Djossou2017,
|
||
title = {Is {{Growth Pro-Poor}} in {{Benin}}? {{Evidence Using}} a {{
|
||
Multidimensional Measure}} of {{Poverty}}: {{Is Growth Pro-Poor}} in
|
||
{{Benin}}?},
|
||
shorttitle = {Is {{Growth Pro-Poor}} in {{Benin}}?},
|
||
author = {Djossou, Gbetoton Nadege and Kane, Gilles Quentin and Novignon,
|
||
Jacob},
|
||
date = {2017-12},
|
||
journaltitle = {Poverty \& Public Policy},
|
||
volume = {9},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
pages = {426--443},
|
||
issn = {19442858},
|
||
doi = {10.1002/pop4.199},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,inequality::income,status::skimmed,topic::gender,
|
||
topic::poverty,topic::rural},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/BGZ6SI3H/Djossou2017_Is Growth Pro-Poor
|
||
in Benin.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Do2022,
|
||
title = {Livestock Production and Income Inequality in Rural {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Do, Truong Lam and Nguyen, Trung Thanh and Grote, Ulrike},
|
||
date = {2022-02},
|
||
journaltitle = {Empirical Economics},
|
||
shortjournal = {Empir Econ},
|
||
volume = {62},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
pages = {409--438},
|
||
issn = {0377-7332, 1435-8921},
|
||
doi = {10.1007/s00181-021-02022-6},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,topic::agriculture,
|
||
topic::livestock},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/ED6YGVJ6/Do2022_Livestock production and
|
||
income inequality in rural Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Duta2017,
|
||
title = {DJIBOUTI: THE KEY OF THE HORN OF AFRICA},
|
||
author = {Duţă, Andreea Emilia},
|
||
date = {2017},
|
||
journaltitle = {Analele Universitǎti̧i "Constantin Brâncuşi" din Târgu Jiu.
|
||
Serie Litere și Ştiinţe Sociale},
|
||
pages = {33--43},
|
||
publisher = {{University Constantin Brancusi of Târgu-Jiu}},
|
||
location = {{Targu Jiu}},
|
||
issn = {1844-6051},
|
||
abstract = {This paper aims to put together the puzzle pieces that led to
|
||
Islamic radicalism in the Horn of Africa. Moreover it will
|
||
examine the consequences poor governance, unclear borders,
|
||
illegal arms trade and an unstable economy have on the region,
|
||
focusing on the state of Djibouti.These terms will be put in a
|
||
wider international context, analyzing what implications the
|
||
involvement of Western countries has on the region.},
|
||
copyright = {Copyright University Constantin Brancusi of Târgu-Jiu 2017},
|
||
langid = {rum},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Ebrahim2021,
|
||
title = {Women’s Economic Empowerment and {{COVID-19}}: The Case of
|
||
Vulnerable Women with Intersectional Identities in {{Indonesia}} and
|
||
{{Vietnam}}},
|
||
shorttitle = {Women’s Economic Empowerment and {{COVID-19}}},
|
||
author = {Ebrahim, Christine and Jack, Adrienne and Jones, Linda},
|
||
date = {2021-06-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {Enterprise Development and Microfinance},
|
||
shortjournal = {EDM},
|
||
volume = {32},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {44--56},
|
||
issn = {17551978, 17551986},
|
||
doi = {10.3362/1755-1986.21-00007},
|
||
abstract = {In recent decades, ASEAN has seen significant progress in gender
|
||
equality and women’s empowerment. However, advances have not been
|
||
even and vulnerable women with a range of intersectional
|
||
identities have not benefited to the same extent as more
|
||
privileged women or their male counterparts. Moreover, despite
|
||
ASEAN’s much-lauded success in COVID-19 prevention and
|
||
containment, the economic gains that had been achieved for women
|
||
and girls are rapidly losing ground. Disruptions in the tourism
|
||
sector, labour migration, and international trade have had a
|
||
devastating economic impact on vulnerable populations, while
|
||
innovations and new implementation approaches have provided some
|
||
relief for low-income communities. This paper describes the
|
||
COVID-19 economic fallout for women homeworkers and labour
|
||
migrants engaged in informal jobs in Indonesia and low-income
|
||
ethnic minority women in agriculture and tourism sectors in
|
||
north-west Vietnam. It discusses early experiences and learning
|
||
on pivoting projects, funded by the Government of Australia, to
|
||
be COVID-19 responsive and contribute to longer-term recovery.},
|
||
keywords = {inequality::gender,topic::agriculture,topic::covid19,
|
||
topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/YU72GAUG/Ebrahim2021_Women’s economic
|
||
empowerment and COVID-19.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Edmonds2006,
|
||
title = {Trade Liberalization and the Allocation of Labor between Households
|
||
and Markets in a Poor Country},
|
||
author = {Edmonds, Eric V. and Pavcnik, Nina},
|
||
date = {2006-07},
|
||
journaltitle = {Journal of International Economics},
|
||
shortjournal = {Journal of International Economics},
|
||
volume = {69},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
pages = {272--295},
|
||
issn = {00221996},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.jinteco.2005.05.010},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,topic::poverty,
|
||
topic::trade_liberalization},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{ElKhamlichi2022,
|
||
title = {Comparative Study of {{COVID-19}} Situation between
|
||
Lower-Middle-Income Countries in the Eastern {{Mediterranean}}
|
||
Region},
|
||
author = {El Khamlichi, Sokaina and Maurady, Amal and Sedqui, Abdelfettah},
|
||
date = {2022-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {Journal of Oral Biology and Craniofacial Research},
|
||
shortjournal = {Journal of Oral Biology and Craniofacial Research},
|
||
volume = {12},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {165--176},
|
||
issn = {22124268},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.jobcr.2021.10.004},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Djibouti,status::skimmed,topic::covid19},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/H9SGGQDQ/El Khamlichi2022_Comparative
|
||
study of COVID-19 situation between lower-middle-income countries.pdf
|
||
},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Emara2020,
|
||
title = {Financial Inclusion and Extreme Poverty in the {{MENA}} Region: A
|
||
Gap Analysis Approach},
|
||
shorttitle = {Financial Inclusion and Extreme Poverty in the {{MENA}} Region
|
||
},
|
||
author = {Emara, Noha and Mohieldin, Mahmoud},
|
||
date = {2020-06-19},
|
||
journaltitle = {Review of Economics and Political Science},
|
||
shortjournal = {REPS},
|
||
volume = {5},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
pages = {207--230},
|
||
issn = {2356-9980, 2631-3561},
|
||
doi = {10.1108/REPS-03-2020-0041},
|
||
abstract = {Purpose Eradicating extreme poverty remains one of the most
|
||
significant and challenging sustainable development goals (SDGs)
|
||
in the Middle East and North African (MENA) region. The latest
|
||
World Bank statistics from 2018 show that extreme poverty in MENA
|
||
increased from 2.6\% to 5\% between 2013 and 2015. MENA ranks
|
||
third among developing regions for extreme poverty and fell short
|
||
of halving extreme poverty by 2015 – the target established by
|
||
the United Nations’ (UN) millennium development goals, the
|
||
precursor to the SDGs. The purpose of this study is to analyze
|
||
the impact of financial inclusion on extreme poverty for a sample
|
||
of 34 countries over the period 1990–2017.
|
||
Design/methodology/approach Using system general method of
|
||
moments dynamic panel estimation methodology on annual data for
|
||
11 MENA countries and 23 emerging markets (EMs) over the period
|
||
1990 – 2017, this study begins by estimating the impact of
|
||
financial inclusion – using measures of access and usage – on the
|
||
eradication of extreme poverty by 2030, the first goal of the
|
||
SDGs. Findings The results of the study indicate that, on one
|
||
hand, financial access measures have a positive, statistically
|
||
significant impact on reducing extreme poverty for the full
|
||
sample and the MENA region. The second part of the study uses a
|
||
gap analysis against four poverty targets – 0\%, 1.5\%, 3\% and 5
|
||
\% – and shows that no MENA country and few EM countries will be
|
||
able to close the extreme poverty gap and reach the target of 0\%
|
||
by 2030 by depending solely on improvements in financial access.
|
||
These targets are based on the two benchmarks set by the World
|
||
Bank and the UN, with intermediaries to capture error and give a
|
||
fuller picture of what is possible. However, if improvements in
|
||
financial inclusion alone can bring every EM and MENA country
|
||
except Djibouti and Romania to bring the most accessible target
|
||
of reducing global extreme poverty to no more than 5\% by 2030.
|
||
Originality/value While research on poverty reduction in the
|
||
region tends to focus on financial development and governance,
|
||
less attention has been paid to the role of financial inclusion.
|
||
SDG 1 – eliminating poverty in all its forms – explicitly
|
||
highlights the importance of access to financial services. Indeed
|
||
, evidence from Argentina, India, Kenya, Malawi, Niger and other
|
||
countries demonstrates the ways in which financial inclusion can
|
||
impact poverty (Klapper, El-Zoghbi and Hess, 2016). When people
|
||
are included in the financial system, they are better able to
|
||
improve their health, invest in education and business and make
|
||
choices that benefit their entire families. Financial inclusion
|
||
advances governments, too: introducing vast segments of the
|
||
population into the financial system by digitizing social
|
||
transfers, for example, can cut government costs and reduce
|
||
leakage, with benefits that ripple across society. Yet, the links
|
||
between financial inclusion and poverty reduction in MENA are
|
||
less established. This study aims to analyze the importance of
|
||
financial inclusion in addressing extreme poverty by 2030, the
|
||
year UN member states set as a target for achieving the SDGs.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Djibouti,inequality::income,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/X4KLTJFE/Emara2020_Financial inclusion
|
||
and extreme poverty in the MENA region.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Esaku2021,
|
||
title = {Does the Shadow Economy Increase Income Inequality in the Short-
|
||
and Long-Run? {{Empirical}} Evidence from {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Esaku, Stephen},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
journaltitle = {Cogent economics \& finance},
|
||
volume = {9},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
publisher = {{Cogent}},
|
||
location = {{London}},
|
||
issn = {2332-2039},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/23322039.2021.1912896},
|
||
abstract = {This paper investigates whether the size of the shadow economy
|
||
increases income inequality in Uganda. This p3aper applies the
|
||
autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) bounds testing approach to
|
||
cointegration, to test the long- and short-run relationship
|
||
between the shadow economy and income inequality. The results
|
||
indicate a positive and statistically significant relationship
|
||
between the size of the shadow economy and income inequality in
|
||
both the long-run and short-run, all else equal. The results show
|
||
that a large size of the shadow economy significantly increases
|
||
income inequality, in both the long- and short-run. This suggests
|
||
that people who fail to be absorbed into the formal economy face
|
||
fewer livelihood opportunities, giving them the incentive to
|
||
operate in the shadow economy as a means of survival, for them
|
||
and their families since there are fewer chances of success in
|
||
the formal economy. Our findings suggest that income inequality
|
||
could be partially driven by increasing informality in the
|
||
country. The practical implication of these results is that
|
||
policies aimed at tackling income inequality should also be
|
||
directed at addressing the underlying factors that drive the
|
||
shadow economy.},
|
||
copyright = {2021 The Author(s). This open access article is distributed
|
||
under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 license. 2021},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,status::skimmed},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/SYR6AV8U/Esaku2021_Does the shadow
|
||
economy increase income inequality in the short- and long-run.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Esaku2021a,
|
||
title = {Does Income Inequality Increase the Shadow Economy? {{Empirical}}
|
||
Evidence from {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Esaku, Stephen},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
journaltitle = {Development studies research},
|
||
volume = {8},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {147--160},
|
||
publisher = {{Routledge}},
|
||
location = {{Abingdon}},
|
||
issn = {2166-5095},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/21665095.2021.1939082},
|
||
abstract = {This paper applies the autoregressive distributed lag bounds
|
||
testing method to investigate the long- and short-run
|
||
relationship between the size of the shadow economy and income
|
||
inequality in Uganda. The findings reveal evidence of the long
|
||
and short-run relationship between the shadow economy and income
|
||
inequality. We find that a rise in income inequality
|
||
significantly increases the size of the shadow economy in Uganda,
|
||
all else equal. These results are robust to the use of
|
||
alternative econometric methods. At the policy level, instituting
|
||
income redistribution policies to uplift the standard of the poor
|
||
, improving resource allocation to productive sectors of the
|
||
economy, reforming the tax system and macroeconomic environment,
|
||
and implementing political and institutional reforms to address
|
||
corruption could be viable policy options to address informality
|
||
in Uganda.},
|
||
copyright = {2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as
|
||
Taylor \& Francis Group 2021},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::income,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::formality},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/5ZQH59RL/Esaku2021_Does income inequality
|
||
increase the shadow economy.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Fesselmeyer2010,
|
||
title = {Urban-Biased {{Policies}} and the {{Increasing Rural-Urban
|
||
Expenditure Gap}} in {{Vietnam}} in the 1990s: {{URBAN-BIASED
|
||
POLICIES IN VIETNAM IN THE 1990S}}},
|
||
shorttitle = {Urban-Biased {{Policies}} and the {{Increasing Rural-Urban
|
||
Expenditure Gap}} in {{Vietnam}} in the 1990s},
|
||
author = {Fesselmeyer, Eric and Le, Kien T.},
|
||
date = {2010-06},
|
||
journaltitle = {Asian Economic Journal},
|
||
volume = {24},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
pages = {161--178},
|
||
issn = {13513958},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/j.1467-8381.2010.02034.x},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::rural,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::education,topic::urban},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/AB2Z7CPT/Fesselmeyer2010_Urban-biased
|
||
Policies and the Increasing Rural-Urban Expenditure Gap in
|
||
Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{Fritzen2005,
|
||
title = {Vietnam Inequality Report 2005: {{Assessment}} and Policy Choices},
|
||
author = {Fritzen, Scott and Brassard, Caroline and Bui, Thi Minh Tam},
|
||
date = {2005},
|
||
institution = {{DFID Vietnam}},
|
||
location = {{Hanoi}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::,review::synthesis},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/Z4A2KQWV/Fritzen2005_Vietnam inequality
|
||
report 2005.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{Golumbeanu2013,
|
||
title = {Connection {{Charges}} and {{Electricity Access}} in {{Sub-Saharan
|
||
Africa}}},
|
||
author = {Golumbeanu, Raluca and Barnes, Douglas},
|
||
date = {2013},
|
||
series = {Policy {{Research Working Paper}}},
|
||
number = {6511},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/15871},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,inequality::rural,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::electricity,topic::rural},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/MYW9JFER/Golumbeanu2013_Connection
|
||
Charges and Electricity Access in Sub-Saharan Africa.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Gruijters2020,
|
||
title = {Learning {{Inequality}} in {{Francophone Africa}}: {{School Quality
|
||
}} and the {{Educational Achievement}} of {{Rich}} and {{Poor
|
||
Children}}},
|
||
shorttitle = {Learning {{Inequality}} in {{Francophone Africa}}},
|
||
author = {Gruijters, Rob J. and Behrman, Julia A.},
|
||
date = {2020-07},
|
||
journaltitle = {Sociology of Education},
|
||
shortjournal = {Sociol Educ},
|
||
volume = {93},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
pages = {256--276},
|
||
issn = {0038-0407, 1939-8573},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/0038040720919379},
|
||
abstract = {Influential reports about the “learning crisis” in the global
|
||
South generally pay insufficient attention to social inequalities
|
||
in learning. In this study, we explore the association between
|
||
family socioeconomic status and learning outcomes in 10
|
||
francophone African countries using data from the Programme for
|
||
the Analysis of Education Systems, a standardized assessment of
|
||
pupils’ mathematics and reading competence at the end of primary
|
||
school. We start by showing that learning outcomes among grade 6
|
||
pupils are both poor and highly stratified. We then develop and
|
||
test a conceptual framework that highlights three mechanisms
|
||
through which family socioeconomic status might contribute to
|
||
learning: (1) educational resources at home, (2) health and
|
||
well-being, and (3) differences in school quality. We find that
|
||
most of the effect of family background on learning outcomes
|
||
operates through school quality, which results from a combination
|
||
of the unequal distribution of resources (such as teachers and
|
||
textbooks) across schools and high socioeconomic segregation
|
||
between schools. On the basis of these results, we suggest that
|
||
most countries in the region could improve equity as well as
|
||
overall performance by “raising the floor” in school quality.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,inequality::education,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::education,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/IL6LR44L/Gruijters2020_Learning
|
||
Inequality in Francophone Africa.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{HoNgocSon2013Vart,
|
||
title = {Vulnerability and Resilience to Climate Change in the Northern
|
||
Mountainous Region of {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Son, Ngoc Ho},
|
||
date = {2013},
|
||
abstract = {Vietnam is one of the most vulnerable countries to climate
|
||
change in the world. Therefore, adaptation is increasingly seen
|
||
as both a necessary and urgent response. However, little is known
|
||
in terms of who are the most vulnerable and how adaptation will
|
||
take place. This thesis examines vulnerability and resilience to
|
||
climate variability and change among communities in the northern
|
||
mountainous region (NMR) of Vietnam which have been identified as
|
||
among the most vulnerable communities in Vietnam. The conceptual
|
||
framework of this thesis draws on the linkage between
|
||
vulnerability, adaptive capacity and resilience through which to
|
||
gain a better understanding of vulnerability, adaptation and
|
||
resilience to climate change in Vietnam's NMR. I adopt a
|
||
participatory approach to vulnerability assessment using
|
||
community villages as case studies and using drought, flood and
|
||
cold weather snaps as study events. The case study of the
|
||
human-natural system is located in the Ba Be district of Bac Kan
|
||
province in the NMR of Vietnam. Data were collected in the field
|
||
from July 2009 to February 2010. Primary data in the form of
|
||
interviews, focus groups and community workshops, and field
|
||
observations, as well as insights from local and regional
|
||
decision-makers, resource managers, scientists and secondary data
|
||
in the form of published and unpublished literature are used to
|
||
investigate how communities manage and experience climate-related
|
||
risks. This study found that households and communities in the
|
||
NMR are vulnerable to multiple stresses. The main socio-econmic
|
||
determinants of local vulnerability include poverty, inequality,
|
||
environmental degradation, ethnicity and community. The
|
||
interaction of climate risks and local vulnerability factors
|
||
threatens to overwhelm their resilience. Therefore, this thesis
|
||
argues that adaptation needs to be rooted in both reducing
|
||
vulnerability and increasing resilience of communities. The
|
||
central approach is to increase the adaptive capacity of
|
||
communities to become resilient in the context of change and
|
||
uncertainty. It will be more fruitful if policy interventions
|
||
focus on improving adaptive capacity of vulnerable communities
|
||
rather than providing specific solutions to uncertain future
|
||
climates. Addressing fundamental livelihood and development
|
||
problems and strengthening social, economic, and environmental
|
||
resilience will make it easier for local communities to respond
|
||
to climatic risks, whether they are droughts, floods or cold
|
||
snaps. Another key conclusion is that communities that learn to
|
||
live with change and uncertainty become resilient. The insights
|
||
emphasize the importance of learning, information exchange,
|
||
reflection, innovation, and anticipation, all of which are key
|
||
elements of the adaptation process. Source: TROVE},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::environmental,topic::climate_change
|
||
},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{HongVoDuc2021TDoG,
|
||
title = {The Determinants of Gender Income Inequality in Vietnam: {{A}}
|
||
Longitudinal Data Analysis},
|
||
author = {Hong Vo, Duc and Van, Loan Thi-Hong and Tran, Dai Binh and Vu, Tan
|
||
Ngoc and Ho, Chi Minh},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
journaltitle = {Emerging markets finance \& trade},
|
||
volume = {57},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {198--222},
|
||
publisher = {{Routledge}},
|
||
location = {{Abingdon}},
|
||
issn = {1540-496X},
|
||
abstract = {Despite a great effort from the Vietnamese government, women in
|
||
Vietnam have generally been at the disadvantaged position to
|
||
access education and development opportunities. As a result, the
|
||
wage gaps between men and women exist. This study is conducted to
|
||
investigate the gender income inequality in Vietnam in the
|
||
2004-2016 period using data from Vietnam Household Living
|
||
Standards Surveys (VHLSS). The results indicate that the gender
|
||
pay gap in Vietnam has decreased during the research period.
|
||
Empirical findings also indicate that education, ethnicity,
|
||
economic sectors, and geographic areas are main determinants
|
||
causing wage differentials in Vietnam. Additionally, the gender
|
||
pay gap, with the focus on the so-called "Within inequality", is
|
||
heterogeneous across the wage distribution using unconditional
|
||
quantile regression approach. In particular, the gender pay gap
|
||
is shown to be higher at the top and the bottom quantiles of the
|
||
wage distribution, indicating that inequality is more severe
|
||
among low-paid and high-paid wage earners. These findings suggest
|
||
that the government's policies should focus on encouraging
|
||
education and improving the national economy creating more jobs
|
||
for women to reduce gender wage gap in Vietnam.},
|
||
copyright = {Copyright © Taylor \& Francis Group, LLC},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,topic::gender},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/EFB6LJVX/ContentServer.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Hudson2021,
|
||
title = {Self-Stated Recovery from Flooding: {{Empirical}} Results from a
|
||
Survey in {{Central Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Hudson, Paul and Pham, My and Hagedoorn, Liselotte and Thieken,
|
||
Annegret H and Lasage, R and Bubeck, Philip},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
journaltitle = {Journal of flood risk management},
|
||
volume = {14},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {1--15},
|
||
publisher = {{Blackwell Publishing Ltd}},
|
||
location = {{Oxford, UK}},
|
||
issn = {1753-318X},
|
||
abstract = {Social inequalities lead to flood resilience inequalities across
|
||
social groups, a topic that requires improved documentation and
|
||
understanding. The objective of this paper is to attend to these
|
||
differences by investigating self-stated flood recovery across
|
||
genders in Vietnam as a conceptual replication of earlier results
|
||
from Germany. This study employs a regression-based analysis of 1
|
||
,010 respondents divided between a rural coastal and an urban
|
||
community inThua Thien-Hue province. The results highlight an
|
||
important set of recovery process-related variables. The set of
|
||
relevant variables is similar across genders in terms of
|
||
inclusion and influence, and includes age, social capital,
|
||
internal and external support after a flood, perceived severity
|
||
of previous flood impacts, and the perception of
|
||
stress-resilience. However, women were affected more heavily by
|
||
flooding in terms of longer recovery times, which should be
|
||
accounted for in risk management. Overall, the studied variables
|
||
perform similarly in Vietnam and Germany. This study, therefore,
|
||
conceptually replicates previous results suggesting that women
|
||
display slightly slower recovery levels as well as that
|
||
psychological variables influence recovery rates more than
|
||
adverse flood impacts. This provides an indication of the
|
||
results' potentially robust nature due to the different
|
||
socio-environmental contexts in Germany and Vietnam.},
|
||
copyright = {info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::environmental,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::climate_change,topic::flooding},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/AUV5KVF6/Hudson2021_Self-stated recovery
|
||
from flooding.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{HuynhPhuongT.A.2014Wdva,
|
||
title = {Women's Differentiated Vulnerability and Adaptations to
|
||
Climate-Related Agricultural Water Scarcity in Rural {{Central
|
||
Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Huynh, Phuong T. A. and Resurreccion, Bernadette P.},
|
||
date = {2014},
|
||
journaltitle = {Climate and development},
|
||
volume = {6},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
pages = {226--237},
|
||
publisher = {{Taylor \& Francis}},
|
||
issn = {1756-5529},
|
||
abstract = {This field-based study applies a mixed methods approach that
|
||
combines both qualitative and quantitative analyses to
|
||
investigate the differences in women's vulnerability and
|
||
adaptations to climate-related agricultural water scarcity in Ky
|
||
Nam commune, Central Vietnam. The study highlights the
|
||
heterogeneity of women as a group and their intersectional
|
||
dynamics as they adapt to increasing agricultural water scarcity
|
||
on their rural livelihoods. The findings show that social
|
||
differences including gender, class, household headship, age and
|
||
stage of life shape women's differentiated experiences in
|
||
vulnerability in access to water, to forestland and credit; in
|
||
turn mark their adaptation differentiation to climate-related
|
||
agricultural water scarcity. It also stresses that existing
|
||
development policies can cause inequality in resource access in
|
||
practice, running the risk of further marginalizing certain
|
||
groups of women, especially female heads of household. Meanwhile,
|
||
the current National Target Program to Respond to Climate Change
|
||
of Vietnam is blind to issues of women's differentiated
|
||
vulnerability and adaptive capacity. This study suggests that if
|
||
these current development and adaptation measures do not pay
|
||
proper attention to differentiated gender experience, it is
|
||
likely to exacerbate the vulnerabilities of those affected,
|
||
particularly female heads of household, rather than help them. In
|
||
addition, these development and climate programmes have to be
|
||
redesigned to accommodate more context-specific policies instead
|
||
of one-size-fits-all packages that will effectively address
|
||
women's (and men's) differential needs and unequal relations and
|
||
circumstances.},
|
||
copyright = {2014 Taylor \& Francis 2014},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {inequality::environmental,inequality::gender,next,
|
||
topic::climate_change,topic::river},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/8GCHSZTY/Huynh2014_Women's differentiated
|
||
vulnerability and adaptations to climate-related.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{Ibarra2020,
|
||
title = {Location {{Matters}}: {{Welfare Among Urban}} and {{Rural Poor}} in
|
||
{{Djibouti}}},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2020},
|
||
series = {Poverty and {{Equity Note}}},
|
||
number = {18},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/203361579888116251/Location-Matters-Welfare-Among-Urban-and-Rural-Poor-in-Djibouti
|
||
},
|
||
keywords = {country::Djibouti,status::skimmed,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/MPGT5NQI/Ibarra2020_Location Matters.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Imai2011,
|
||
title = {Poverty, Inequality and Ethnic Minorities in {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Imai, Katsushi S. and Gaiha, Raghav and Kang, Woojin},
|
||
date = {2011-05},
|
||
journaltitle = {International Review of Applied Economics},
|
||
shortjournal = {International Review of Applied Economics},
|
||
volume = {25},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
pages = {249--282},
|
||
issn = {0269-2171, 1465-3486},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/02692171.2010.483471},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::ethnicity,next},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/4HH88HQY/Imai2011_Poverty, inequality and
|
||
ethnic minorities in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Imbert2013,
|
||
title = {Decomposing the {{Labor Market Earnings Inequality}}: {{The Public}
|
||
} and {{Private Sectors}} in {{Vietnam}}, 1993–2006},
|
||
shorttitle = {Decomposing the {{Labor Market Earnings Inequality}}},
|
||
author = {Imbert, Clément},
|
||
date = {2013-01-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {The World Bank Economic Review},
|
||
volume = {27},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {55--79},
|
||
issn = {1564-698X, 0258-6770},
|
||
doi = {10.1093/wber/lhs009},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::modernization},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/FXT2NQW3/Imbert2013_Decomposing the Labor
|
||
Market Earnings Inequality.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Jafino2021,
|
||
title = {Accounting for Multisectoral Dynamics in Supporting Equitable
|
||
Adaptation Planning: {{A}} Case Study on the Rice Agriculture in the
|
||
Vietnam Mekong Delta},
|
||
author = {Jafino, B.A and Kwakkel, J.H and Klijn, F and Dung, Nguyen Viet
|
||
and van Delden, Hedwig and Haasnoot, Marjolijn and Sutanudjaja,
|
||
Edwin H},
|
||
options = {useprefix=true},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
journaltitle = {Earth's future},
|
||
volume = {9},
|
||
number = {5},
|
||
publisher = {{Wiley}},
|
||
issn = {2328-4277},
|
||
abstract = {The need for explicitly considering equity in climate change
|
||
adaptation planning is increasingly being recognized. However,
|
||
evaluations of adaptation often adopt an aggregated perspective,
|
||
while disaggregation of results is important to learn about who
|
||
benefits when and where. A typical example is adaptation of rice
|
||
agriculture in the Vietnam Mekong Delta (VMD). Efforts focused on
|
||
flood protection have mainly benefitted large-scale farmers while
|
||
harming small-scale farmers. To investigate the distributional
|
||
consequences of adaptation policies in the VMD, we assess both
|
||
aggregate total output and equity indicators, as well as
|
||
disaggregated impacts in terms of district-level farming
|
||
profitability. Doing so requires an adequate representation of
|
||
the multisectoral dynamics between the human and biophysical
|
||
systems which influence farming profitability. We develop a
|
||
spatially explicit integrated assessment model that couples
|
||
inundation, sedimentation, soil fertility and nutrient dynamics,
|
||
and behavioral land-use change and farming profitability
|
||
calculation. We find that inter-district inequality responds in a
|
||
non-linear way to climatic and socio-economic changes and choices
|
||
of adaptation policies. The patterns of who wins and who loses
|
||
could change substantially when a different policy is implemented
|
||
or if a slightly different uncertain future materializes. We also
|
||
find that there is no simple ranking of alternative adaptation
|
||
policies, so one should make trade-offs based on agreed
|
||
preferences. Accounting for equity implies exploring the
|
||
distribution of outcomes over different groups over a range of
|
||
uncertain futures. Only by accounting for multisectoral dynamics
|
||
can planners anticipate the equity consequences of adaptation and
|
||
prepare additional measures to aid the worse-off actors.},
|
||
copyright = {info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::environmental,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::agriculture,topic::climate_change,topic::river},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/Q9YPVAP2/Jafino2021_Accounting for
|
||
multisectoral dynamics in supporting equitable adaptation.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Jagger2012,
|
||
title = {Environmental Income, Rural Livelihoods, and Income Inequality in
|
||
Western {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Jagger, Pamela},
|
||
date = {2012},
|
||
journaltitle = {Forests, trees and livelihoods},
|
||
volume = {21},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
pages = {70--84},
|
||
publisher = {{Taylor \& Francis Group}},
|
||
issn = {1472-8028},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/14728028.2012.698846},
|
||
abstract = {The contribution of forest and wild products to the rural
|
||
economy is typically undervalued in standard socioeconomic
|
||
surveys. In this paper, we analyze the contribution of forests
|
||
and other wild areas to the subsistence and cash incomes of rural
|
||
households for a large sample of households in western Uganda (N
|
||
= 521) and explore the role of these typically underestimated
|
||
income sources in interhousehold measures of income inequality.
|
||
We find that households in rural Uganda derive 26\% of total
|
||
household income from forests and other wild areas including
|
||
fallows, agricultural lands, wetlands, grasslands, and shrub
|
||
land. In general, households in the lower income quartiles are
|
||
more dependent on forest and wild products for subsistence income
|
||
, whereas wealthier households are more engaged in the sale of
|
||
higher value forest products for cash income. Forests, fallows,
|
||
and agricultural lands are the most important sources of
|
||
environmental income for households in western Uganda. Income
|
||
from forest and wild products plays an important role in reducing
|
||
income inequality between households. The loss of this income due
|
||
to deforestation and environmental degradation has implications
|
||
for rural livelihood portfolios and for the well-being of
|
||
relatively poor households.},
|
||
copyright = {Copyright Taylor \& Francis Group, LLC 2012},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,status::skimmed},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/JWE37R5N/Jagger2012_Environmental income,
|
||
rural livelihoods, and income inequality in western Uganda.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@incollection{Jaglin2019,
|
||
title = {Electricity Autonomy and Power Grids in {{Africa}}: From Rural
|
||
Experiments to Urban Hybridizations},
|
||
booktitle = {Local {{Energy Autonomy}}: {{Spaces}}, {{Scales}}, {{Politics}}
|
||
},
|
||
author = {Jaglin, Sylvy},
|
||
editor = {Lopez, F. and Pellgrino, M. and Coutard, O.},
|
||
date = {2019},
|
||
pages = {291--310},
|
||
publisher = {{Wiley}},
|
||
location = {{Hoboken, NJ}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,status::skimmed,topic::electricity,topic::rural,
|
||
topic::urban},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/MQ94YYD3/Jaglin2019_Electricity autonomy
|
||
and power grids in Africa.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Karpouzoglou2019,
|
||
title = {Unearthing the Ripple Effects of Power and Resilience in Large
|
||
River Deltas},
|
||
author = {Karpouzoglou, Timos and Dang Tri, VAN Pham and Ahmed, Farhana and
|
||
Warner, Jeroen and Hoang, Long and Nguyen, Thanh Binh and Dewulf,
|
||
Art},
|
||
date = {2019},
|
||
journaltitle = {Environmental science \& policy},
|
||
volume = {98},
|
||
pages = {1--10},
|
||
publisher = {{Elsevier Ltd}},
|
||
issn = {1462-9011},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.envsci.2019.04.011},
|
||
abstract = {•Delta interventions to manage flood risk can amplify power and
|
||
social inequalities.•The power dimensions of delta interventions
|
||
tends to be overlooked.•Resilience in deltas needs to transition
|
||
towards a situated and negotiated frame.•Power considerations
|
||
need to inform a more holistic understanding of delta resilience.
|
||
Historically, flood resilience in large river deltas has been
|
||
strongly tied to institutional and infrastructural interventions
|
||
to manage flood risk (such as building of embankments and
|
||
drainage structures). However, the introduction of
|
||
infrastructural works has inevitably brought unforeseen, major
|
||
consequences, such as biodiversity and accelerated land
|
||
subsidence, endangering the fertile characteristics that made
|
||
them interesting places to live in in the first place. These
|
||
ripple effects have sparked, a reconsideration of what deltas are
|
||
, questioning the very separation and control between nature and
|
||
culture, and how deltas are to be dealt with. These effects have
|
||
further sparked changing modalities of power that tend to be
|
||
overlooked by delta and resilience scholars alike. As a result,
|
||
there is a real risk that future interventions to increase
|
||
resilience, will in fact amplify unequal power relations in
|
||
deltas as opposed to alleviating them. If the system as a whole
|
||
has achieved some level of flood resilience (partly due to the
|
||
flood defence mechanisms in place), does infrastructure have a
|
||
differential effect on people’s mobility under flood conditions?
|
||
Are some groups experiencing less rather than more security, as
|
||
water accumulates in some places but not others? This paper
|
||
presents theoretical insights on the relationship between power
|
||
and resilience in delta regions supported by two case studies,
|
||
the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna delta in Bangladesh and the Mekong
|
||
delta in Vietnam.},
|
||
copyright = {2019 The Authors},
|
||
issue = {March 2018},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::,status::skimmed,topic::river},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/24YV5JI5/Karpouzoglou2019_Unearthing the
|
||
ripple effects of power and resilience in large river deltas.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{Kozel2014,
|
||
title = {Well {{Begun}} but {{Not Yet Done}}: {{Progress}} and {{Emerging
|
||
Challenges}} for {{Poverty Reduction}} in {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Kozel, Valerie J.},
|
||
date = {2014},
|
||
series = {Equity and {{Development}}},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/20074},
|
||
keywords = {inequality::ethnicity,inequality::income,inequality::regional,
|
||
topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/HBSGJ5K7/Kozel2014_Well Begun but Not Yet
|
||
Done.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Kyozira2021,
|
||
title = {Integration of the {{UNHCR Refugee Health Information System}} into
|
||
the {{National Health Information Management System}} for {{Uganda}}
|
||
},
|
||
author = {Kyozira, Caroline and Kabahuma, Catherine and Mpiima, Jamiru},
|
||
date = {2021-09},
|
||
journaltitle = {Health Information Management Journal},
|
||
shortjournal = {HIM J},
|
||
volume = {50},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
pages = {149--156},
|
||
issn = {1833-3583, 1833-3575},
|
||
doi = {10.1177/1833358319887817},
|
||
abstract = {Background: The Uganda Government, together with development
|
||
partners, has provided continuing support services (including
|
||
protection, food, nutrition, healthcare, water and sanitation) to
|
||
refugee-hosting Districts to successfully manage refugees from
|
||
different neighbouring countries in established settlements. This
|
||
service has increased the need for timely and accurate
|
||
information to facilitate planning, resource allocation and
|
||
decision-making. Complexity in providing effective public health
|
||
interventions in refugee settings coupled with increased funding
|
||
requirements has created demands for better data and improved
|
||
accountability. Health data management in refugee settings is
|
||
faced with several information gaps that require harmonisation of
|
||
the Ugandan National Health Management Information System (UHMIS)
|
||
and United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) Refugee
|
||
Health Information System (RHIS). This article discusses the
|
||
rationale for harmonisation of the UNHCR RHIS, which currently
|
||
captures refugee data, with the UHMIS. It also provides insights
|
||
into how refugee health data management can be harmonised within
|
||
a country’s national health management information system.
|
||
Method: A consultative meeting with various stakeholders,
|
||
including the Ugandan Ministry of Health, district health teams,
|
||
representatives from UNHCR, the United Nations Children Education
|
||
Fund (UNICEF), United States Government and civil society
|
||
organisations, was held with an aim to review the UHMIS and UNHCR
|
||
RHIS health data management systems and identify ways to
|
||
harmonise the two to achieve an integrated system for monitoring
|
||
health service delivery in Uganda. Results: Several challenges
|
||
facing refugee-hosting district health teams with regard to
|
||
health data management were identified, including data collection
|
||
, analysis and reporting. There was unanimous agreement to
|
||
prioritise an integrated data management system and harmonisation
|
||
of national refugee stakeholder data requirements, guided by key
|
||
recommendations developed at the meeting. Conclusion: This
|
||
article outlines a proposed model that can be used to harmonise
|
||
the UNHCR RHIS with the UHMIS. The national refugee stakeholder
|
||
data requirements have been harmonised, and Uganda looks forward
|
||
to achieving better health data quality through a more
|
||
comprehensive national UHMIS to inform policy planning and
|
||
evidence-based decision-making.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,status::skimmed,topic::refugee,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/M9FTQ6TN/Kyozira2021_Integration of the
|
||
UNHCR Refugee Health Information System into the National.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Le2019,
|
||
title = {Trade Liberalisation, Poverty, and Inequality in {{Vietnam}}: A
|
||
Quantile Regression Approach},
|
||
shorttitle = {Trade Liberalisation, Poverty, and Inequality in {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Le, Minh Son and Su, Jen-Je and Nguyen, Jeremy},
|
||
date = {2019-08-02},
|
||
journaltitle = {Applied Economics},
|
||
shortjournal = {Applied Economics},
|
||
volume = {51},
|
||
number = {36},
|
||
pages = {3971--3981},
|
||
issn = {0003-6846, 1466-4283},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/00036846.2019.1588943},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,topic::modernization,
|
||
topic::poverty,topic::trade_liberalization},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/3S5CUK6U/Le2019_Trade liberalisation,
|
||
poverty, and inequality in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Le2021,
|
||
title = {The {{Impact}} of {{Foreign Direct Investment}} on {{Income
|
||
Inequality}} in {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Le, Quoc Hoi and Do, Quynh Anh and Pham, Hong Chuong and Nguyen,
|
||
Thanh Duong},
|
||
date = {2021-03-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {Economies},
|
||
shortjournal = {Economies},
|
||
volume = {9},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {27},
|
||
issn = {2227-7099},
|
||
doi = {10.3390/economies9010027},
|
||
abstract = {Foreign direct investments (FDI) is an important determinant of
|
||
economic growth. FDI does not only contribute to the growth and
|
||
economic development but also affects income through contributing
|
||
to economic development and the impact on employment and salary
|
||
structure of developing countries. The aim of this paper is to
|
||
analyze the impact of FDI on income inequality in Vietnam. This
|
||
study is the first attempt to examine the impact of FDI on income
|
||
inequality under the constraints of the institution and education
|
||
levels. To address the potential endogeneity problem, this study
|
||
adopts Genernalized Method of Moment (GMM) model to conduct the
|
||
estimation. A two-step GMM model with robust standard errors is
|
||
used in the study. Empirical results show that FDI tends to
|
||
increase income inequality in Vietnam and the existence of a
|
||
non-linearity relationship between FDI and income inequality is
|
||
also validated. Moreover, the study finds that the effects of FDI
|
||
on income inequality are different depending on the level of
|
||
education and institutions of the host provinces in Vietnam. The
|
||
results of this study imply that, in order to ensure sustainable
|
||
development, Vietnam’s policies should focus on improving the
|
||
quality of economic governance and the administrative reform
|
||
efforts of the government of the provinces and cities. Besides,
|
||
policies should focus on increasing investment in public
|
||
education and improving human capital, which not only can reduce
|
||
income inequality but also can attract more FDI inflows.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,topic::FDI},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/RJ3NP2U8/Le2021_The Impact of Foreign
|
||
Direct Investment on Income Inequality in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Le2021a,
|
||
title = {The {{Impact}} of {{Foreign Direct Investment}} on {{Income
|
||
Inequality}} in {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Le, Quoc Hoi and Do, Quynh Anh and Pham, Hong Chuong and Nguyen,
|
||
Thanh Duong},
|
||
date = {2021-03-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {Economies},
|
||
shortjournal = {Economies},
|
||
volume = {9},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {27},
|
||
issn = {2227-7099},
|
||
doi = {10.3390/economies9010027},
|
||
abstract = {Foreign direct investments (FDI) is an important determinant of
|
||
economic growth. FDI does not only contribute to the growth and
|
||
economic development but also affects income through contributing
|
||
to economic development and the impact on employment and salary
|
||
structure of developing countries. The aim of this paper is to
|
||
analyze the impact of FDI on income inequality in Vietnam. This
|
||
study is the first attempt to examine the impact of FDI on income
|
||
inequality under the constraints of the institution and education
|
||
levels. To address the potential endogeneity problem, this study
|
||
adopts Genernalized Method of Moment (GMM) model to conduct the
|
||
estimation. A two-step GMM model with robust standard errors is
|
||
used in the study. Empirical results show that FDI tends to
|
||
increase income inequality in Vietnam and the existence of a
|
||
non-linearity relationship between FDI and income inequality is
|
||
also validated. Moreover, the study finds that the effects of FDI
|
||
on income inequality are different depending on the level of
|
||
education and institutions of the host provinces in Vietnam. The
|
||
results of this study imply that, in order to ensure sustainable
|
||
development, Vietnam’s policies should focus on improving the
|
||
quality of economic governance and the administrative reform
|
||
efforts of the government of the provinces and cities. Besides,
|
||
policies should focus on increasing investment in public
|
||
education and improving human capital, which not only can reduce
|
||
income inequality but also can attract more FDI inflows.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/DIRG96MR/Le2021_The Impact of Foreign
|
||
Direct Investment on Income Inequality in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Le2022,
|
||
title = {Growth, Inequality and Poverty in {{Vietnam}}: {{How}} Did Trade
|
||
Liberalisation Help the Poor, 2002–2008},
|
||
shorttitle = {Growth, Inequality and Poverty in {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Le, Nga Van T. and Hoang, Trung Xuan and Tran, Tuyen Quang},
|
||
date = {2022-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {International Journal of Social Welfare},
|
||
shortjournal = {Int J Soc Welfare},
|
||
volume = {31},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {86--99},
|
||
issn = {1369-6866, 1468-2397},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/ijsw.12482},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,topic::modernization,
|
||
topic::poverty,topic::trade_liberalization},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/L8HM9TCJ/Le2022_Growth, inequality and
|
||
poverty in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@book{Lipton1977,
|
||
title = {Why Poor People Stay Poor: Urban Bias in World Development},
|
||
shorttitle = {Why Poor People Stay Poor},
|
||
author = {Lipton, Michael},
|
||
date = {1977},
|
||
publisher = {{Harvard University Press}},
|
||
location = {{Cambridge}},
|
||
isbn = {978-0-674-95238-6},
|
||
pagetotal = {467},
|
||
keywords = {topic::poverty,topic::urban},
|
||
note = {Includes index},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Logie2021,
|
||
title = {Exploring Resource Scarcity and Contextual Influences on Wellbeing
|
||
among Young Refugees in {{Bidi Bidi}} Refugee Settlement, {{Uganda}}
|
||
: Findings from a Qualitative Study},
|
||
shorttitle = {Exploring Resource Scarcity and Contextual Influences on
|
||
Wellbeing among Young Refugees in {{Bidi Bidi}} Refugee
|
||
Settlement, {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Logie, Carmen H. and Okumu, Moses and Latif, Maya and Musoke,
|
||
Daniel Kibuuka and Odong Lukone, Simon and Mwima, Simon and
|
||
Kyambadde, Peter},
|
||
date = {2021-12},
|
||
journaltitle = {Conflict and Health},
|
||
shortjournal = {Confl Health},
|
||
volume = {15},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {3},
|
||
issn = {1752-1505},
|
||
doi = {10.1186/s13031-020-00336-3},
|
||
abstract = {Abstract Background Contextual factors including poverty and
|
||
inequitable gender norms harm refugee adolescent and youths’
|
||
wellbeing. Our study focused on Bidi Bidi refugee settlement that
|
||
hosts more than 230,000 of Uganda’s 1.4 million refugees. We
|
||
explored contextual factors associated with wellbeing among
|
||
refugee adolescents and youth aged 16–24 in Bidi Bidi refugee
|
||
settlement. Methods We conducted 6 focus groups ( n \,=\,3: women
|
||
, n \,=\,3: men) and 10 individual interviews with young refugees
|
||
aged 16–24 living in Bidi Bidi. We used physical distancing
|
||
practices in a private outdoor space. Focus groups and individual
|
||
interviews explored socio-environmental factors associated with
|
||
refugee youth wellbeing. Focus groups were digitally recorded,
|
||
transcribed verbatim, and coded by two investigators using
|
||
thematic analysis. Analysis was informed by a social contextual
|
||
theoretical approach that considers the interplay between
|
||
material (resource access), symbolic (cultural norms and values),
|
||
and relational (social relationships) contextual factors that can
|
||
enable or constrain health promotion. Results Participants
|
||
included 58 youth (29 men; 29 women), mean age was 20.9 (range
|
||
16–24). Most participants (82.8\%, n \,=\,48) were from South
|
||
Sudan and the remaining from the Democratic Republic of Congo
|
||
(17.2\% [ n \,=\,10]). Participant narratives revealed the
|
||
complex interrelationships between material, symbolic and
|
||
relational contexts that shaped wellbeing. Resource constraints
|
||
of poverty, food insecurity, and unemployment (material contexts)
|
||
produced stress and increased sexual and gender-based violence
|
||
(SGBV) targeting adolescent girls and women. These economic
|
||
insecurities exacerbated inequitable gender norms (symbolic
|
||
contexts) to increase early marriage and transactional sex
|
||
(relational context) among adolescent girls and young women.
|
||
Gendered tasks such as collecting water and firewood also
|
||
increased SGBV exposure among girls and young women, and this was
|
||
exacerbated by deforestation. Participants reported negative
|
||
community impacts (relational context) of COVID-19 that were
|
||
associated with fear and panic, alongside increased social
|
||
isolation due to business, school and church closures.
|
||
Conclusions Resource scarcity produced pervasive stressors among
|
||
refugee adolescents and youth. Findings signal the importance of
|
||
gender transformative approaches to SGBV prevention that
|
||
integrate attention to resource scarcity. These may be
|
||
particularly relevant in the COVID-19 pandemic. Findings signal
|
||
the importance of developing health enabling social contexts with
|
||
and for refugee adolescents and youth.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,status::skimmed,topic::refugee,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/PEAXZ8P9/Logie2021_Exploring resource
|
||
scarcity and contextual influences on wellbeing among young.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Lwanga-Ntale2014,
|
||
title = {Inequality in {{Uganda}}: {{Issues}} for Discussion and Further
|
||
Research},
|
||
shorttitle = {Inequality in {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Lwanga-Ntale, Charles},
|
||
date = {2014-12},
|
||
journaltitle = {Development},
|
||
shortjournal = {Development},
|
||
volume = {57},
|
||
number = {3-4},
|
||
pages = {601--617},
|
||
issn = {1011-6370, 1461-7072},
|
||
doi = {10.1057/dev.2015.44},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,index::Gini,inequality::income,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::consumption,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/WRXL7XN9/Lwanga-Ntale2014_Inequality in
|
||
Uganda.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Martin2001,
|
||
title = {Djibouti},
|
||
author = {Martin, E. and Martin, P.},
|
||
date = {2001-09-29},
|
||
journaltitle = {BMJ},
|
||
shortjournal = {BMJ},
|
||
volume = {323},
|
||
number = {7315},
|
||
pages = {759--759},
|
||
issn = {0959-8138, 1468-5833},
|
||
doi = {10.1136/bmj.323.7315.759},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{McCaig2011,
|
||
title = {Exporting out of Poverty: {{Provincial}} Poverty in {{Vietnam}} and
|
||
{{U}}.{{S}}. Market Access},
|
||
shorttitle = {Exporting out of Poverty},
|
||
author = {McCaig, Brian},
|
||
date = {2011-09},
|
||
journaltitle = {Journal of International Economics},
|
||
shortjournal = {Journal of International Economics},
|
||
volume = {85},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {102--113},
|
||
issn = {00221996},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.jinteco.2011.05.007},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {inequality::rural,topic::poverty,topic::trade_liberalization},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/94NXHFS2/McCaig2011_Exporting out of
|
||
poverty.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{McCaig2013,
|
||
title = {Moving out of {{Agriculture}}: {{Structural Change}} in {{Vietnam}}
|
||
},
|
||
shorttitle = {Moving out of {{Agriculture}}},
|
||
author = {McCaig, Brian and Pavcnik, Nina},
|
||
date = {2013-11},
|
||
number = {w19616},
|
||
pages = {w19616},
|
||
institution = {{National Bureau of Economic Research}},
|
||
location = {{Cambridge, MA}},
|
||
doi = {10.3386/w19616},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,status::skimmed,topic::modernization,
|
||
topic::trade_liberalization},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/N6FT2KCY/McCaig2013_Moving out of
|
||
Agriculture.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{McCaig2014,
|
||
title = {Export {{Markets}} and {{Labor Allocation}} in a {{Low-income
|
||
Country}}},
|
||
author = {McCaig, Brian and Pavcnik, Nina},
|
||
date = {2014-09},
|
||
number = {w20455},
|
||
pages = {w20455},
|
||
institution = {{National Bureau of Economic Research}},
|
||
location = {{Cambridge, MA}},
|
||
doi = {10.3386/w20455},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,status::skimmed,topic::modernization,
|
||
topic::trade_liberalization},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/Y52395K2/McCaig2014_Export Markets and
|
||
Labor Allocation in a Low-income Country.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{McCaig2015,
|
||
title = {Informal {{Employment}} in a {{Growing}} and {{Globalizing
|
||
Low-Income Country}}},
|
||
author = {McCaig, Brian and Pavcnik, Nina},
|
||
date = {2015-05-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {American Economic Review},
|
||
shortjournal = {American Economic Review},
|
||
volume = {105},
|
||
number = {5},
|
||
pages = {545--550},
|
||
issn = {0002-8282},
|
||
doi = {10.1257/aer.p20151051},
|
||
abstract = {We document several facts about workforce transitions from the
|
||
informal to the formal sector in Vietnam, a fast growing,
|
||
industrializing, and low-income country. First, younger workers,
|
||
particularly migrants, are more likely to work in the formal
|
||
sector and stay there permanently. Second, the decline in the
|
||
aggregate share of informal employment occurs through changes
|
||
between and within birth cohorts. Third, younger, educated, male,
|
||
and urban workers are more likely to switch to the formal sector
|
||
than other workers initially in the informal sector. Poorly
|
||
educated, older, female, rural workers face little prospect of
|
||
formalization. Fourth, formalization coincides with occupational
|
||
upgrading.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,status::skimmed,topic::formality,
|
||
topic::modernization},
|
||
file = {
|
||
/home/marty/Zotero/storage/B9PDGNH5/mccaig2015.pdf.pdf;/home/marty/Zotero/storage/WXU5WNWQ/zAppendix.pdf
|
||
},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{McNabb2018,
|
||
title = {Exploring Regional and Gender Disparities in {{Beninese}} Primary
|
||
School Attendance: A Multilevel Approach},
|
||
shorttitle = {Exploring Regional and Gender Disparities in {{Beninese}}
|
||
Primary School Attendance},
|
||
author = {McNabb, Kyle},
|
||
date = {2018-09-03},
|
||
journaltitle = {Education Economics},
|
||
shortjournal = {Education Economics},
|
||
volume = {26},
|
||
number = {5},
|
||
pages = {534--556},
|
||
issn = {0964-5292, 1469-5782},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/09645292.2018.1426732},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,inequality::education,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::education,topic::rural},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/GGSIGNY3/McNabb2018_Exploring regional
|
||
and gender disparities in Beninese primary school attendance.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{Mendiratta2019,
|
||
title = {Challenges to {{Inclusive Growth}}: {{A Poverty}} and {{Equity
|
||
Assessment}} of {{Djibouti}}},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2019-12-03},
|
||
series = {Poverty and {{Equity Note}}},
|
||
number = {18},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/449741576097502078/Challenges-to-Inclusive-Growth-A-Poverty-and-Equity-Assessment-of-Djibouti
|
||
},
|
||
keywords = {country::Djibouti,status::skimmed,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/64DR8Z8S/Mendiratta2019_Challenges to
|
||
Inclusive Growth.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{Mendiratta2020,
|
||
title = {The {{Multi-Dimensional Nature}} of {{Poverty}} in {{Djibouti}}},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2020},
|
||
series = {Poverty and {{Equity Note}}},
|
||
number = {30},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/272691596006234817/The-Multi-Dimensional-Nature-of-Poverty-in-Djibouti
|
||
},
|
||
keywords = {country::Djibouti,status::skimmed,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/TU49848D/Mendiratta2020_The
|
||
Multi-Dimensional Nature of Poverty in Djibouti.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{MinhHo2021,
|
||
title = {{{DOES GOVERNMENT SPENDING ON EDUCATION AFFECT PROVINCIAL INCOME
|
||
INEQUALITY IN VIETNAM}}?},
|
||
author = {Minh Ho, Chi and Thai-Thuong Le, Quan and The Vo, Anh and Hong Vo,
|
||
Duc and Thi-Thieu Ha, Dao},
|
||
date = {2021-06-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {The Singapore Economic Review},
|
||
shortjournal = {Singapore Econ. Rev.},
|
||
volume = {66},
|
||
number = {04},
|
||
pages = {1105--1123},
|
||
issn = {0217-5908, 1793-6837},
|
||
doi = {10.1142/S0217590820490065},
|
||
abstract = {This study is conducted to examine the effect on income
|
||
inequality of government spending on education across 63
|
||
provinces in Vietnam. The generalized method of moments (GMM)
|
||
regression technique is used to address potential endogeneity in
|
||
the model caused by income inequality and inequality in
|
||
government spending on education. Income inequality is proxied by
|
||
both the Gini coefficient and the Theil index. Inequality in
|
||
government spending on education in Vietnam is estimated using a
|
||
novel entropic approach, which decomposes the inequality into two
|
||
components: “within-province” inequality and “between-province”
|
||
inequality. Data for the period from 2010 to 2016 are used. Our
|
||
empirical findings are summarized as follows. First,
|
||
“within-province” inequality accounts for a substantial portion
|
||
of inequality in government spending on education. This means
|
||
that although the Vietnamese national government has done well in
|
||
terms of allocating spending on education across 63 provinces,
|
||
inequality in education spending appears across districts within
|
||
provinces. Second, both total inequality of government spending
|
||
on education and its two components are positively associated
|
||
with income inequality across provinces. As such, reducing
|
||
differences in government spending on education across provinces
|
||
and across districts within provinces is an effective mechanism
|
||
for reducing income inequality across provinces and across
|
||
districts within provinces in Vietnam.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,topic::education},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/EMUDX7L5/Minh Ho2021_DOES GOVERNMENT
|
||
SPENDING ON EDUCATION AFFECT PROVINCIAL INCOME INEQUALITY IN.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Monje2020,
|
||
title = {A Prolonged Cholera Outbreak Caused by Drinking Contaminated Stream
|
||
Water, {{Kyangwali}} Refugee Settlement, {{Hoima District}}, {{
|
||
Western Uganda}}: 2018},
|
||
shorttitle = {A Prolonged Cholera Outbreak Caused by Drinking Contaminated
|
||
Stream Water, {{Kyangwali}} Refugee Settlement, {{Hoima
|
||
District}}, {{Western Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Monje, Fred and Ario, Alex Riolexus and Musewa, Angella and
|
||
Bainomugisha, Kenneth and Mirembe, Bernadette Basuta and Aliddeki,
|
||
Dativa Maria and Eurien, Daniel and Nsereko, Godfrey and Nanziri,
|
||
Carol and Kisaakye, Esther and Ntono, Vivian and Kwesiga, Benon and
|
||
Kadobera, Daniel and Bulage, Lilian and Bwire, Godfrey and Tusiime,
|
||
Patrick and Harris, Julie and Zhu, Bao-Ping},
|
||
date = {2020-12},
|
||
journaltitle = {Infectious Diseases of Poverty},
|
||
shortjournal = {Infect Dis Poverty},
|
||
volume = {9},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {154},
|
||
issn = {2049-9957},
|
||
doi = {10.1186/s40249-020-00761-9},
|
||
abstract = {Abstract Background On 23 February 2018, the Uganda Ministry of
|
||
Health (MOH) declared a cholera outbreak affecting more than 60
|
||
persons in Kyangwali Refugee Settlement, Hoima District,
|
||
bordering the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). We investigated
|
||
to determine the outbreak scope and risk factors for transmission
|
||
, and recommend evidence-based control measures. Methods We
|
||
defined a suspected case as sudden onset of watery diarrhoea in
|
||
any person aged ≥ 2\,years in Hoima District, 1 February–9 May
|
||
2018. A confirmed case was a suspected case with Vibrio cholerae
|
||
cultured from a stool sample. We found cases by active community
|
||
search and record reviews at Cholera Treatment Centres. We
|
||
calculated case-fatality rates (CFR) and attack rates (AR) by
|
||
sub-county and nationality. In a case-control study, we compared
|
||
exposure factors among case- and control-households. We estimated
|
||
the association between the exposures and outcome using
|
||
Mantel-Haenszel method. We conducted an environmental assessment
|
||
in the refugee settlement, including testing samples of stream
|
||
water, tank water, and spring water for presence of fecal
|
||
coliforms. We tested suspected cholera cases using cholera rapid
|
||
diagnostic test (RDT) kits followed by culture for confirmation.
|
||
Results We identified 2122 case-patients and 44 deaths (CFR\,=\,
|
||
2.1\%). Case-patients originating from Demographic Republic of
|
||
Congo were the most affected (AR\,=\,15/1000). The overall attack
|
||
rate in Hoima District was 3.2/1000, with Kyangwali sub-county
|
||
being the most affected (AR\,=\,13/1000). The outbreak lasted 4
|
||
months, which was a multiple point-source. Environmental
|
||
assessment showed that a stream separating two villages in
|
||
Kyangwali Refugee Settlement was a site of open defecation for
|
||
refugees. Among three water sources tested, only stream water was
|
||
feacally-contaminated, yielding {$>$}\,100\,CFU/100\,ml. Of 130
|
||
stool samples tested, 124 (95\%) yielded V. cholerae by culture .
|
||
Stream water was most strongly associated with illness (odds
|
||
ratio [ OR ]\,=\,14.2, 95\% CI : 1.5–133), although tank water
|
||
also appeared to be independently associated with illness ( OR \,
|
||
=\,11.6, 95\% CI : 1.4–94). Persons who drank tank and stream
|
||
water had a 17-fold higher odds of illness compared with persons
|
||
who drank from other sources ( OR \,=\,17.3, 95\% CI : 2.2–137).
|
||
Conclusions Our investigation demonstrated that this was a
|
||
prolonged cholera outbreak that affected four sub-counties and
|
||
two divisions in Hoima District, and was associated with drinking
|
||
of contaminated stream water. In addition, tank water also
|
||
appears to be unsafe. We recommended boiling drinking water,
|
||
increasing latrine coverage, and provision of safe water by the
|
||
District and entire High Commission for refugees.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,status::skimmed,topic::refugee,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/CGVFN6AB/Monje2020_A prolonged cholera
|
||
outbreak caused by drinking contaminated stream water,.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Mormul2016,
|
||
title = {Ethio‑{{Djiboutian}} Relations in the 21st Century – towards New
|
||
African Cooperation},
|
||
author = {Mormul, Joanna},
|
||
date = {2016},
|
||
journaltitle = {Politeja},
|
||
volume = {13},
|
||
number = {42},
|
||
pages = {263--285},
|
||
publisher = {{KSIĘGARNIA AKADEMICKA Sp. z o.o}},
|
||
location = {{Krakow}},
|
||
issn = {1733-6716},
|
||
doi = {10.12797/Politeja.13.2016.42.16},
|
||
abstract = {Very good political and economic relations between Djibouti and
|
||
Ethiopia can be treated as an exceptional case in such a
|
||
conflict‑ridden region as the Horn of Africa. Ethio‑Djiboutian
|
||
cooperation owes its ‘renaissance’ mostly to the consequences of
|
||
the Eritrean‑Ethiopian War (1998‑2000) that left Ethiopia without
|
||
direct access to a sea basin. Today, almost 90 per cent of
|
||
Ethiopia’s imports arrive via the port of Djibouti, while
|
||
Ethiopia receives 95 per cent of the Djiboutian regional exports.
|
||
One of the major infrastructure projects that should even enhance
|
||
this interstate cooperation is the renovation of the Addis
|
||
Ababa‑Djibouti railway network. On the international level both
|
||
countries are committed to the question of security, peace, and
|
||
stability in the Horn of Africa (e.g. they are engaged in Somali
|
||
and South Sudanese peace processes). The aim of the article is to
|
||
analyze this specific personification of interstate cooperation,
|
||
taking into account the conceptual framework imposed by the
|
||
definition of ‘interstate cooperation’ proposed by Robert Keohane
|
||
back in the 1980s. Moreover, the author attempts to look into the
|
||
reasons behind the development of such good relations, seeking an
|
||
answer to the question whether or not they are really mutually
|
||
beneficial.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/QA48TT2X/Mormul2016_Ethio‑Djiboutian
|
||
relations in the 21st century – towards new african cooperation.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Mottet2009,
|
||
title = {L’urbanisation de la ville de Ninh Binh dans le delta du fleuve
|
||
rouge (Vietnam) : mise en perspective des forces et faiblesses de la
|
||
gestion du risque d’inondation.},
|
||
shorttitle = {L’urbanisation de la ville de Ninh Binh dans le delta du
|
||
fleuve rouge (Vietnam)},
|
||
author = {Mottet, Éric and Roche, Yann},
|
||
date = {2009-01-08},
|
||
journaltitle = {VertigO},
|
||
shortjournal = {vertigo},
|
||
issn = {1492-8442},
|
||
doi = {10.4000/vertigo.7782},
|
||
issue = {Volume 8 Numéro 3},
|
||
langid = {french},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,status::skimmed,topic::flooding,topic::river},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/NAZTWGZW/Mottet2009_L’urbanisation de la
|
||
ville de Ninh Binh dans le delta du fleuve rouge (Vietnam).pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Mulogo2018,
|
||
title = {Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Service Availability at Rural Health
|
||
Care Facilities in Southwestern {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Mulogo, Edgar Mugema and Matte, Micheal and Wesuta, Andrew and
|
||
Bagenda, Fred and Apecu, Richard and Ntaro, Moses},
|
||
date = {2018},
|
||
journaltitle = {Journal of environmental and public health},
|
||
volume = {2018},
|
||
publisher = {{Hindawi}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,status::skimmed,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/P4LYXIC5/Mulogo2018_Water, sanitation,
|
||
and hygiene service availability at rural health care.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Nagasha2019,
|
||
title = {Effect of Climate Variability on Gender Roles among Communities
|
||
Surrounding {{Lake Mburo National Park}}, {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Nagasha, Judith Irene and Mugisha, Lawrence and Kaase-Bwanga,
|
||
Elizabeth and Onyuth, Howard and Ocaido, Michael},
|
||
date = {2019-02-18},
|
||
journaltitle = {Emerald Open Research},
|
||
shortjournal = {Emerald Open Res},
|
||
volume = {1},
|
||
pages = {7},
|
||
issn = {2631-3952},
|
||
doi = {10.12688/emeraldopenres.12953.1},
|
||
abstract = {Background: Climate change has been increasingly recognized as a
|
||
global crisis with effects on gender roles. Recently, communities
|
||
surrounding Lake Mburo national park, Uganda have been
|
||
experiencing frequent severe droughts. It was against this
|
||
background that this study was designed to understand effect of
|
||
climate change on gender roles. Methods: This cross sectional
|
||
study reviewed the effect of climate change on men and women’s
|
||
gender roles using a pragmatic research paradigm based on a
|
||
thematic review model using participatory methods and a
|
||
structured questionnaire. Results: The study found that men and
|
||
women’s gender roles were altered during extreme dryness. Men
|
||
played their roles sequentially focusing on one single productive
|
||
role, while women played their roles simultaneously, balancing
|
||
the demands of each role with their limited available time.
|
||
Effect of climate change variability affected productive roles
|
||
more in Kiruhura district than Isingiro district. There was
|
||
migration of both men and women in search for water and pasture
|
||
livestock in Kiruhura district which distorted gender roles of
|
||
women. Consequently, women and children had a heavier load and
|
||
were the most people affected by climate change effects.
|
||
Conclusion: Gender roles of communities surrounding Lake Mburo
|
||
National Park, Uganda were affected and altered by the effects of
|
||
climate change variability. Therefore, institutions offering
|
||
climate services to local communities should consider gender in
|
||
decision making, access to resources, information and knowledge.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::gender,level::local,status::read,
|
||
topic::climate_change,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/VS54U4XB/Nagasha2019_Effect of climate
|
||
variability on gender roles among communities surrounding.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Naiga2015,
|
||
title = {Challenging Pathways to Safe Water Access in Rural {{Uganda}}: {{
|
||
From}} Supply to Demand-Driven Water Governance},
|
||
author = {Naiga, Resty and Penker, Marianne and Hogl, Karl},
|
||
date = {2015},
|
||
journaltitle = {International Journal of the Commons},
|
||
volume = {9},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,status::skimmed,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/8MLNSETL/Naiga2015_Challenging pathways
|
||
to safe water access in rural Uganda.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Naiga2018,
|
||
title = {Conditions for Successful Community-Based Water Management:
|
||
Perspectives from Rural {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Naiga, Resty},
|
||
date = {2018},
|
||
journaltitle = {international journal of Rural management},
|
||
volume = {14},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
pages = {110--135},
|
||
publisher = {{SAGE Publications Sage India: New Delhi, India}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::regional,level::local,
|
||
status::skimmed,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/4YUD22W9/Naiga2018_Conditions for
|
||
successful community-based water management.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@thesis{Natuhwera2019,
|
||
title = {Rights of Women to Property, a Case Study of {{Isingiro}} District,
|
||
{{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Natuhwera, Justus},
|
||
date = {2019},
|
||
institution = {{Kampala international University, School of Law}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,irrelevant::thesis,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/9VNT58MW/Natuhwera2019_Rights of women to
|
||
property, a case study of Isingiro district, Uganda.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Nguyen2007,
|
||
title = {A Quantile Regression Decomposition of Urban–Rural Inequality in {{
|
||
Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Nguyen, Binh T. and Albrecht, James W. and Vroman, Susan B. and
|
||
Westbrook, M. Daniel},
|
||
date = {2007-07},
|
||
journaltitle = {Journal of Development Economics},
|
||
shortjournal = {Journal of Development Economics},
|
||
volume = {83},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
pages = {466--490},
|
||
issn = {03043878},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.jdeveco.2006.04.006},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::ethnicity,inequality::rural,
|
||
status::skimmed,topic::education},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/WN23U92I/Nguyen2007_A quantile regression
|
||
decomposition of urban–rural inequality in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Nguyen2018,
|
||
title = {Economic Growth, Inequality, and Poverty in {{Vietnam}}: {{Nguyen
|
||
AND Pham}} - {{{\emph{ECONOMIC GROWTH}}}}{\emph{, }}{{{\emph{
|
||
INEQUALITY}}}}{\emph{, }}{{{\emph{AND POVERTY IN VIETNAM}}}}},
|
||
shorttitle = {Economic Growth, Inequality, and Poverty in {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Nguyen, Cuong V. and Pham, Nguyet M.},
|
||
date = {2018-05},
|
||
journaltitle = {Asian-Pacific Economic Literature},
|
||
shortjournal = {Asia Pac Econ Lit.},
|
||
volume = {32},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {45--58},
|
||
issn = {08189935},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/apel.12219},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,topic::modernization,
|
||
topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/7JLMIQA8/Asian-Pac Economic Lit - 2018 -
|
||
Nguyen - Economic growth inequality and poverty in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Nguyen2019,
|
||
title = {Energy Transition, Poverty and Inequality in {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Nguyen, Trung Thanh and Nguyen, Thanh-Tung and Hoang, Viet-Ngu and
|
||
Wilson, Clevo and Managi, Shunsuke},
|
||
date = {2019-09},
|
||
journaltitle = {Energy Policy},
|
||
shortjournal = {Energy Policy},
|
||
volume = {132},
|
||
pages = {536--548},
|
||
issn = {03014215},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.enpol.2019.06.001},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::,topic::energy,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/BS8J9JT6/Nguyen2019_Energy transition,
|
||
poverty and inequality in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Nguyen2020,
|
||
title = {Essays on Housing Affordability and Housing Quality Dilemmas in {{
|
||
Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Nguyen, Phuong},
|
||
date = {2020},
|
||
abstract = {The housing affordability problem is a profound and increasing
|
||
challenge facing policy-makers in the developing world, where
|
||
poor households are the most vulnerable to problems arising from
|
||
a shortage of affordable and adequate housing. In Vietnam, the
|
||
housing market has undergone fundamental changes driven by
|
||
widening income inequality, increasing urbanisation and
|
||
decreasing household size. The housing price-to-income ratio, a
|
||
measure of housing affordability, is currently at an
|
||
unprecedentedly high level. Vietnam's experience is impacted by a
|
||
number of elements such as rapidly rising costs of housing,
|
||
unequal income distribution, speculative activities, constraints
|
||
in land supply and housing finance, housing market structure, and
|
||
the regulatory environment. Over three studies, this thesis
|
||
carries out the econometric analysis of secondary data to explore
|
||
mechanisms underlying housing affordability in Vietnam and its
|
||
flow-on effects on household well-being. Noticing that the
|
||
distribution of income plays a crucial role in explaining the
|
||
housing affordability problem, the first study analyses the
|
||
influence of income inequality on a number of housing outcomes,
|
||
including housing price-to-income ratio, housing values, and
|
||
household choices of housing type and housing conditions in
|
||
Vietnam's urban areas. It does so by employing data from the
|
||
Vietnam Household Living Standard Survey as well as
|
||
district-level data from the Statistical Yearbook of Vietnam from
|
||
2010 to 2016. The estimated results demonstrate that rising
|
||
income inequality, measured by the Gini coefficient at the
|
||
district level, is associated with rising housing cost burden and
|
||
a substitution effect towards consuming poor-quality housing
|
||
resulting from a lack of housing affordability. The findings of
|
||
this study provide deep insights into the long-lasting existence
|
||
of informal and self-built housing in Vietnam, which is
|
||
predominantly in sub-standard forms and frequently lack essential
|
||
amenities. Next, the second study measures the effects of poor
|
||
housing conditions on occupants' physical and mental health. This
|
||
study employs the Vietnam Access to Resources Household Survey
|
||
(VARHS) data from 2008 to 2016. Empirical findings from this
|
||
chapter indicate that living in deprived housing conditions is
|
||
associated with a higher number of sick days within a year,
|
||
worsening mental well-being and a more inferior self-reported
|
||
health status of the occupants. The estimated results also show
|
||
that the intensity of deprived housing conditions, measured by an
|
||
increase in the number of housing problems, tends to worsen all
|
||
health outcomes considered. These results provide a better
|
||
understanding of the role of a dwelling's structural and sanitary
|
||
conditions on individuals' health and have important implications
|
||
for public policies. The third study examines the role of housing
|
||
conditions in enhancing households' resilience to natural
|
||
disasters. This study separately looks at three of the most
|
||
frequently occurring natural disasters in Vietnam, which include
|
||
floods, droughts, and typhoons. This study also uses data from
|
||
the VARHS. The findings from this chapter make a significant
|
||
contribution to the literature on natural disasters by analysing
|
||
the link between the physical attributes of housing and the
|
||
probability of achieving full recovery post a disaster. In
|
||
particular, the empirical findings suggest that those living in
|
||
substandard houses are not only more vulnerable to disasters but
|
||
take longer to recover. Source: TROVE},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::housing},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/FD3NAYXR/NGUYEN2020_Essays on housing
|
||
affordability and housing quality dilemmas in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{NguyenAnThinh2020Drtc,
|
||
title = {Diversified Responses to Contemporary Pressures on Sloping
|
||
Agricultural Land: {{Thai}} Farmer’s Perception of Mountainous
|
||
Landscapes in Northern {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Nguyen, An Thinh and Hens, Luc},
|
||
date = {2020},
|
||
journaltitle = {Environment, development and sustainability},
|
||
volume = {23},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
pages = {5411--5429},
|
||
publisher = {{Springer Netherlands}},
|
||
location = {{Dordrecht}},
|
||
issn = {1387-585X},
|
||
doi = {10.1007/s10668-020-00822-x},
|
||
abstract = {Mountains cover approximately three quarters of the Vietnam,
|
||
mainly in the north, west, and central parts of the country.
|
||
Among the 38 ethnic minorities inhabiting the northern mountains
|
||
of Vietnam, the Thai population is the second largest. Cultural
|
||
landscapes and traditional agricultural uplands shaped by the
|
||
Thai have a long history and represent a mosaic of paddy and
|
||
vegetable fields along rivers and springs, forests and
|
||
plantations of trees on slopes. This pattern is now changing
|
||
significantly, which results in a diversification of the fields
|
||
shaped by Thai farmers. This study deals with understanding the
|
||
pressures driving the changes, the new state of the upland
|
||
agriculture, and the way the Thai of the Son Thinh mountain (Yen
|
||
Bai, Vietnam) respond to sustain their upland farming systems.
|
||
Land quality indicators (LQIs) are identified using the
|
||
pressure–state–response (PSR) framework. Sixty completed
|
||
questionnaires with 65 closed questions each using a five-point
|
||
Likert scale were collected in 2016. The results show that Thai
|
||
farmers nowadays apply a wider-scale solutions to deal with the
|
||
sustainability of agricultural upland on the slopes as compared
|
||
to a limited number of traditional farming techniques that were
|
||
used in the past. Climate change hazards (floods, droughts,
|
||
landslides, extreme cold, and flash floods), the scarcity of
|
||
irrigation water, and agricultural land put pressure on the
|
||
slopes. The most noticeable socioeconomic impacts are migration,
|
||
population growth, and unstable input and output prices. The most
|
||
considerable changes in the state of the land quality are soil
|
||
erosion, land degradation, and local cultivation practices.
|
||
Modifying cultivation options, applying soil conservation
|
||
practices, improving indigenous techniques, and implementing
|
||
agricultural land use policies are the most significant responses
|
||
to modify land use and its pressures. Responses of the Thai
|
||
farmers on sustainable sloping land use are put in a structural
|
||
model with a horizontal diversification strategy. Recommendations
|
||
concern mainstreaming the local indigenous knowledge on
|
||
agricultural land use, land management policies, and implementing
|
||
the LQIs based on PSR framework for sustainable land use planning
|
||
on the slopes in Vietnam.},
|
||
copyright = {Springer Nature B.V. 2020},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/7A3JX6JC/Nguyen2020_Diversified responses
|
||
to contemporary pressures on sloping agricultural land.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Nosier2018,
|
||
title = {The {{Indirect Effect}} of {{Democracy}} on {{Economic Growth}} in
|
||
the {{MENA Region}} (1990–2015)},
|
||
author = {Nosier, Shereen and El-Karamani, Aya},
|
||
date = {2018-11-19},
|
||
journaltitle = {Economies},
|
||
shortjournal = {Economies},
|
||
volume = {6},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
pages = {61},
|
||
issn = {2227-7099},
|
||
doi = {10.3390/economies6040061},
|
||
abstract = {This paper examines the indirect effect of democracy on economic
|
||
growth using a dataset of 17 MENA countries from 1990 to 2015.
|
||
Democracy is assumed to affect growth through a series of
|
||
channels: education, health, physical capital accumulation per
|
||
labor, government consumption, and trade openness. A system of
|
||
six simultaneous equations using 3SLS, is used to estimate the
|
||
effect of democracy on growth through these channels. For further
|
||
analysis, the countries are classified into groups according to
|
||
the democratic status on the one side, and the level of income on
|
||
the other. The results indicate that democracy enhances growth
|
||
through its positive effect on health in all classifications of
|
||
countries within the MENA region. However, the effect of
|
||
democracy on growth through education and physical capital/labor
|
||
is non-monotonic. Democracy hinders growth through government
|
||
size and trade openness. Once all of these indirect effects are
|
||
accounted for, the overall effect of democracy on growth is
|
||
negative in less democratic countries and poor countries, but
|
||
positive in more democratic countries and rich countries.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Djibouti,status::skimmed,topic::trade_liberalization},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/Y8EAC6RC/Nosier2018_The Indirect Effect
|
||
of Democracy on Economic Growth in the MENA Region.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@incollection{OECD2009,
|
||
title = {Djibouti},
|
||
booktitle = {African Economic Outlook 2009},
|
||
author = {OECD},
|
||
date = {2009},
|
||
series = {African Economic Outlook},
|
||
pages = {211--224},
|
||
publisher = {{OECD Publishing}},
|
||
location = {{Paris}},
|
||
issn = {1999-1029},
|
||
url = {https://dx.doi.org/10.1787/aeo-2009-en},
|
||
abstract = {DJIBOUTI HAS THE ADVANTAGE OF exceptional geographic placement,
|
||
located at the confluence of maritime routes to Asia, Europe, the
|
||
Arabian Peninsula and East Africa. The bulk of its neighbouring
|
||
countries’ foreign trade passes through its international port.
|
||
Djibouti is an entry point to the Common Market for Eastern and
|
||
Southern Africa (COMESA), an economic area of close to 400
|
||
million consumers.},
|
||
isbn = {92-64-08383-9},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
organization = {{OECD}},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/6PGYN69I/OECD2009_Djibouti.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@book{OECD2013,
|
||
title = {Co-Operation {{Report}} 2013 : Ending Poverty.},
|
||
author = {OECD},
|
||
date = {2013},
|
||
publisher = {{OECD Publishing}},
|
||
location = {{Paris}},
|
||
url = {https://dx.doi.org/10.1787/dcr-2013-en},
|
||
abstract = {The Development Co-operation Report (DCR) 2013 explores what
|
||
needs to be done to achieve rapid and sustainable progress in the
|
||
global fight to reduce poverty. The world is on track to achieve
|
||
the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) target of halving the
|
||
proportion of people whose income is less than USD 1.25 a day.
|
||
Nonetheless, we are far from achieving the overarching MDG goal
|
||
of eradicating extreme poverty. While we have learned much about
|
||
what works in terms of reducing poverty, ""getting to zero""
|
||
remains a challenge in the face of the intractable difficulties
|
||
of reaching those mired in extr},
|
||
isbn = {92-64-20101-7},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
organization = {{Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
|
||
(OECD) Staff Corporate Author}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,status::skimmed},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/AN7SU5YY/OECD2013_Co-operation Report
|
||
2013.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@incollection{OECD2013a,
|
||
title = {Aid, Trade and Development Indicators for Djibouti},
|
||
booktitle = {Aid for Trade at a Glance 2013},
|
||
author = {OECD},
|
||
date = {2013},
|
||
series = {Aid for Trade at a Glance},
|
||
pages = {228--229},
|
||
publisher = {{OECD Publishing}},
|
||
location = {{Paris}},
|
||
issn = {2223-4411},
|
||
url = {https://dx.doi.org/10.1787/22234411},
|
||
isbn = {978-92-64-20102-6},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
organization = {{OECD}},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/CUJQ3HYN/OECD2013_Aid, trade and
|
||
development indicators for djibouti.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@dataset{OECD2022,
|
||
title = {Creditor {{Reporting System}} – {{Version}} 13 {{July}} 2022},
|
||
author = {{OECD}},
|
||
date = {2022-07-13},
|
||
publisher = {{OECD}},
|
||
doi = {10.35188/UNU-WIDER/WIID-300622},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,country::Djibouti,country::Ethiopia,
|
||
country::Uganda,country::Vietnam},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@book{OrganisationforEconomicCo-operationandDevelopment2013,
|
||
title = {Global Food Security: Challenges for the Food and Agricultural
|
||
System},
|
||
shorttitle = {Global Food Security},
|
||
editor = {Organisation for Economic Co-operation {and} Development},
|
||
date = {2013},
|
||
location = {{Paris}},
|
||
isbn = {978-92-64-19536-3 978-92-64-19534-9},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
pagetotal = {162},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,topic::agriculture,topic::food},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/KKZDH3D8/Organisation for Economic
|
||
Co-operation and Development2013_Global food security.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@book{Osabuohien2020,
|
||
title = {The {{Palgrave}} Handbook of Agricultural and Rural Development in
|
||
{{Africa}}},
|
||
editor = {Osabuohien, Evans},
|
||
date = {2020},
|
||
publisher = {{Palgrave Macmillan}},
|
||
location = {{Cham, Switzerland}},
|
||
doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-41513-6},
|
||
isbn = {978-3-030-41513-6 978-3-030-41512-9 978-3-030-41515-0},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
pagetotal = {649},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Petrosino2012,
|
||
title = {Interventions in {{Developing Nations}} for {{Improving Primary}}
|
||
and {{Secondary School Enrollment}} of {{Children}}: {{A Systematic
|
||
Review}}},
|
||
shorttitle = {Interventions in {{Developing Nations}} for {{Improving
|
||
Primary}} and {{Secondary School Enrollment}} of {{Children}}},
|
||
author = {Petrosino, Anthony and Morgan, Claire and Fronius, Trevor A. and
|
||
Tanner‐Smith, Emily E. and Boruch, Robert F.},
|
||
date = {2012-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {Campbell Systematic Reviews},
|
||
shortjournal = {Campbell Systematic Reviews},
|
||
volume = {8},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
issn = {1891-1803, 1891-1803},
|
||
doi = {10.4073/csr.2012.19},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/3WY6UMB2/Petrosino2012_Interventions in
|
||
Developing Nations for Improving Primary and Secondary School.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{PhamNgaThanhThi2021Nhea,
|
||
title = {Natural Hazard's Effect and Farmers' Perception: {{Perspectives}}
|
||
from Flash Floods and Landslides in Remotely Mountainous Regions of
|
||
{{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Pham, Nga Thanh Thi and Nong, Duy and Garschagen, Matthias},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
journaltitle = {The Science of the total environment},
|
||
volume = {759},
|
||
pages = {142656--142656},
|
||
publisher = {{Elsevier B.V}},
|
||
location = {{Netherlands}},
|
||
issn = {0048-9697},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142656},
|
||
abstract = {Understanding perceptions of indigenous people toward natural
|
||
disasters is essential in social and environmental research to
|
||
facilitate further studies in investigating the impacts of the
|
||
events, as well as in examining the adaptive strategies and
|
||
having implications for policymakers and relevant institutional
|
||
bodies. We took this essential feature to study the perceptions
|
||
of local people toward the two common natural disasters: flash
|
||
floods and landslides. We selected the case study in three
|
||
communes (An Binh, An Thinh, and Dai Son) in Van Yen district,
|
||
Yen Bai province in Vietnam. This is because flash floods and
|
||
landslides are two frequent natural disasters that highly
|
||
adversely affect these areas where major poor ethnic minority
|
||
communities reside. We conducted six Focus Group Discussions
|
||
(FGDs) and household surveys (405 households) in 2016. The
|
||
results showed that a decline in productivity, a decrease in
|
||
income, more hard-working conditions, and an increase in daily
|
||
expenses were the most observed impacts of these natural
|
||
disasters in the communes. The analysis also revealed that almost
|
||
45\% of farmers perceived an increasing trend in the frequency
|
||
and impacts of flash floods and landslides over the past 15
|
||
years. A Multinomial Logit (MNL) model was used to analyze the
|
||
determinants of farmers' awareness of flash floods and landslides
|
||
, which indicated that farmers' perceptions of flash floods and
|
||
landslides are associated with socio-economic characteristics,
|
||
such as gender, agricultural experience, ethnic groups, climate
|
||
information, and household income conditions. We suggested that
|
||
local governments should pay more attention to strengthen
|
||
farmers' awareness to help improve perceptions of local people
|
||
toward common natural disasters so that they would gain better
|
||
adaptive capacities and become more sustainable, which are in
|
||
line with the Sustainable Development Goals. [Display omitted]
|
||
•Farmers' cognition on flash floods and landslides in Vietnam is
|
||
examined.•Multinomial Logit models are used for investigating
|
||
indigenous farmers' perceptions.•Local farmers' awareness varies
|
||
across different agro-ecological areas.•Socioeconomic features
|
||
are determining forces in explaining farmers' awareness.•Findings
|
||
can be the references for policy-making in regions with similar
|
||
conditions.},
|
||
copyright = {2020 Elsevier B.V.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/TLWQQZEI/Pham2021_Natural hazard's effect
|
||
and farmers' perception.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Rateau2022,
|
||
title = {Electrifying Urban {{Africa}}: Energy Access, City-Making and
|
||
Globalisation in {{Nigeria}} and {{Benin}}},
|
||
shorttitle = {Electrifying Urban {{Africa}}},
|
||
author = {Rateau, Mélanie and Choplin, Armelle},
|
||
date = {2022-01-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {International Development Planning Review},
|
||
shortjournal = {International Development Planning Review},
|
||
volume = {44},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {55--80},
|
||
issn = {1478-3401, 1474-6743},
|
||
doi = {10.3828/idpr.2021.4},
|
||
abstract = {Electricity access has become a crucial issue in global South
|
||
cities. While demand is growing, conventional grids are failing
|
||
or insufficient, especially in Africa. Urban dwellers therefore
|
||
have to develop a wide range of (in)formal infrastructures to
|
||
meet their daily electricity needs. Building on recent studies on
|
||
urban electricity in the global South, this paper aims to
|
||
contribute to the debates on hybrid forms of electricity
|
||
provision by analysing the diffusion of solar panels and
|
||
generators in two cities, Ibadan in Nigeria and Cotonou in Benin.
|
||
Although neighbouring and relatively similar, these two cities
|
||
illustrate distinct daily electrical lives. In Nigeria, an
|
||
electricity-exporting country, people face daily power outages.
|
||
In Benin, a country that depends on Nigeria for its supply, there
|
||
is electricity but it is difficult to connect to the grid because
|
||
of connection costs. Based on an empirical study, the article
|
||
shows that Ibadan’s inhabitants use generators as a complement to
|
||
a conventional grid that is almost universal but unreliable. In
|
||
Cotonou, solar energy is an alternative until they can connect to
|
||
the grid. Generators and solar panels have become the material
|
||
markers of urban Africa, providing information on inequalities in
|
||
access to electricity.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,country::Nigeria,status::read,topic::electricity,
|
||
topic::urban},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/MDMADPTM/Rateau2022_Electrifying urban
|
||
Africa.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Rietveld2022,
|
||
title = {Predictable Patterns of Unsustainable Intensification},
|
||
author = {Rietveld, Anne M and Groot, Jeroen CJ and van der Burg, Margreet},
|
||
options = {useprefix=true},
|
||
date = {2022},
|
||
journaltitle = {International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability},
|
||
volume = {20},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
pages = {461--477},
|
||
publisher = {{Taylor \& Francis}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/ZHCW8S4D/Rietveld2022_Predictable
|
||
patterns of unsustainable intensification.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Sempewo2021,
|
||
title = {Assessing Willingness to Pay for Water during the {{COVID-19}}
|
||
Crisis in {{Ugandan}} Households},
|
||
author = {Sempewo, Jotham Ivan and Kisaakye, Peter and Mushomi, John and
|
||
Tumutungire, Martin Dahlin and Ekyalimpa, Ronald},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
journaltitle = {Social Sciences \& Humanities Open},
|
||
volume = {4},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {100230},
|
||
publisher = {{Elsevier}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::health,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::covid19,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/ZJVIT5DE/Sempewo2021_Assessing
|
||
willingness to pay for water during the COVID-19 crisis in
|
||
Ugandan.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Sempewo2021a,
|
||
title = {The Impact of {{COVID-19}} on Households’ Water Use in {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Sempewo, Jotham Ivan and Mushomi, John and Tumutungire, Martin
|
||
Dahlin and Ekyalimpa, Ronald and Kisaakye, Peter},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
journaltitle = {Water Supply},
|
||
volume = {21},
|
||
number = {5},
|
||
pages = {2489--2504},
|
||
publisher = {{IWA Publishing}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,status::skimmed,topic::covid19,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/CHMK2BB6/Sempewo2021_The impact of
|
||
COVID-19 on households’ water use in Uganda.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Sen2021,
|
||
title = {Farmers’ Barriers to the Access and Use of Climate Information in
|
||
the Mountainous Regions of {{Thừa Thiên Huế}} Province, {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Sen, Le Thi Hoa and Bond, Jennifer and Dung, Nguyen Tien and Hung,
|
||
Hoang Gia and Mai, Nguyen Thi Hong and Phuong, Huynh Thi Anh},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
journaltitle = {Climate services},
|
||
volume = {24},
|
||
pages = {100267-},
|
||
publisher = {{Elsevier B.V}},
|
||
issn = {2405-8807},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.cliser.2021.100267},
|
||
abstract = {Climate change is a major challenge to rural livelihoods in
|
||
Vietnam, particularly in remote and mountainous areas. Access and
|
||
use of climate information is considered vital to households’ and
|
||
communities’ adaptive capacity. This research employed a survey
|
||
to investigate barriers to the access, and use of, formal climate
|
||
change information among two groups of farmers (ethnic minority
|
||
and Kinh) in mountainous areas of Thừa Thiên Huế province,
|
||
Vietnam. Adopting a logit model, the results show that the main
|
||
barriers were: 1) farmers’ lack of trust of formal
|
||
climate-related services; 2) farmers’ lack of perceived risk from
|
||
climate change; and 3) difficulties in balancing climate
|
||
adaptation and economic benefits of new interventions. Ethnicity
|
||
was not a barrier, as all farmers looked for climate information
|
||
from informal channels (friends, neighbors, market actors) rather
|
||
than from formal channels (agricultural departments, television,
|
||
radio), although cultural issues such as language did act as a
|
||
barrier. This research recommends strengthening the networks and
|
||
interactions between market actors and government staff with
|
||
local people, through direct communication and adaptation
|
||
demonstrations. Formal and informal climate information channels
|
||
should be integrated to effectively combine local resources and
|
||
indigenous knowledge with advanced technologies, to support
|
||
farmers’ sustainable and robust climate adaptation responses.
|
||
Further, the research found that while farmers have access to
|
||
devices, such as smart phones, they prefer to use these for
|
||
entertainment rather than climate information. The implications
|
||
of the study therefore are that any future network or
|
||
communication activities should be in local languages and note
|
||
the limitations of using devices for information dissemination.},
|
||
copyright = {2021 The Author(s)},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,status::skimmed,topic::agriculture,
|
||
topic::climate_change},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/TE5D79FK/Sen2021_Farmers’ barriers to the
|
||
access and use of climate information in the.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Smits2019,
|
||
title = {The {{Subnational Human Development Database}}},
|
||
author = {Smits, Jeroen and Permanyer, Iñaki},
|
||
date = {2019-03},
|
||
journaltitle = {Scientific Data},
|
||
shortjournal = {Sci Data},
|
||
volume = {6},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {190038},
|
||
issn = {2052-4463},
|
||
doi = {10.1038/sdata.2019.38},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/VV29YFBP/Smits2019_The Subnational Human
|
||
Development Database.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Son2020,
|
||
title = {Community Adaptation and Climate Change in the {{Northern
|
||
Mountainous Region}} of {{Vietnam}}: {{A}} Case Study of Ethnic
|
||
Minority People in {{Bac Kan Province}}},
|
||
shorttitle = {Community Adaptation and Climate Change in the {{Northern
|
||
Mountainous Region}} of {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Son, Ho and Kingsbury, Aaron},
|
||
date = {2020-01-02},
|
||
journaltitle = {Asian Geographer},
|
||
shortjournal = {Asian Geographer},
|
||
volume = {37},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {33--51},
|
||
issn = {1022-5706, 2158-1762},
|
||
doi = {10.1080/10225706.2019.1701507},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::environmental,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::climate_change},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/CBYPLX4P/Son2020_Community adaptation and
|
||
climate change in the Northern Mountainous Region of.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Ssewanyana2012,
|
||
title = {Poverty and Inequality Dynamics in {{Uganda}}: {{Insights}} from
|
||
the {{Uganda}} National {{Panel Surveys}} 2005/6 and 2009/10},
|
||
shorttitle = {Poverty and Inequality Dynamics in {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Ssewanyana, Sarah and Kasirye, Ibrahim},
|
||
date = {2012},
|
||
publisher = {{Unknown}},
|
||
doi = {10.22004/AG.ECON.148953},
|
||
abstract = {While Uganda has made significant efforts in reducing the
|
||
proportion of individuals and households living below the
|
||
absolute poverty line, nearly 10 percent of the households
|
||
continue to live in persistent or chronic poverty with
|
||
significant differences across geographical areas. Of all
|
||
households classified aspoor in 2009/10, nearly 49 percent were
|
||
chronically poor households and as such the poor are not a
|
||
homogenous group. Compared to 1992-99 period, households in
|
||
Uganda were found to be more vulnerable to poverty in the period
|
||
2005/6-2009/10. These observed changes in the nature and patterns
|
||
of poverty dynamics in Uganda require government to move away
|
||
from universal poverty reduction interventions that continue to
|
||
treat the poor as a homogenous group. Otherwise, Uganda’s
|
||
achievement of the first millennium development goal of halving
|
||
extreme income poverty earlier than 2015 might not be
|
||
sustainable.The paper also examines the drivers of income
|
||
inequality and finds that education remains the key determinant
|
||
of income inequality. At the same time, income differences
|
||
between regions are narrowing suggesting an indication of
|
||
regional convergence on average income. While government’s fiscal
|
||
targeting of the lagging areas and rural areas might explain the
|
||
observed convergence in average income across geographical areas,
|
||
there are other emerging development challenges that require
|
||
further refinement for the current targeting. Access to public
|
||
extension programs such as the National Agricultural Advisory
|
||
Services (NAADS), which are intended to enhance agricultural
|
||
production and productivity is skewed to well-to-do households
|
||
and not evenly distributed across region. Similar observations
|
||
are noted in terms of access to community infrastructure. There
|
||
is also need to ensure that the benefit of economic growth reach
|
||
the poorest in a way that expands their opportunities.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,index::Gini,index::Theil,inequality::education,
|
||
inequality::income,status::skimmed},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/B4AJQX4A/Ssewanyana2012_Poverty and
|
||
inequality dynamics in Uganda.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{Takahashi2007,
|
||
title = {Sources of Regional Income Disparity in Rural {{Vietnam}}: {{
|
||
Oaxaca-blinder}} Decomposition},
|
||
author = {Takahashi, Kazushi},
|
||
date = {2007},
|
||
series = {{{IDE Discussion Papers}}},
|
||
number = {95},
|
||
institution = {{Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade
|
||
Organization}},
|
||
abstract = {This paper investigates determinants of regional income
|
||
disparity in rural Vietnam, with special emphasis placed on the
|
||
roles of human capital and land. We apply a decomposition method,
|
||
suggested by Oaxaca and Blinder. We found that returns to assets
|
||
rather than endowments, especially those of human capital, are
|
||
one of the leading factors to account for income differences
|
||
across regions. We also found that substantial improvements of
|
||
returns to human capital in the Red River delta region are a
|
||
driving force to catch up with Mekong River delta region.
|
||
Unexpectedly, differences in land endowment do not strongly
|
||
correlate with regional income disparity because better access to
|
||
land in a region was partially offset by lower returns.},
|
||
keywords = {inequality::environmental,inequality::regional,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::education,topic::river},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/KFCNGEDE/TakahashiSources of regional
|
||
income disparity in rural Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@book{Taylor2004,
|
||
title = {Social Inequality in {{Vietnam}} and the Challenges to Reform},
|
||
editor = {Taylor, Philip},
|
||
date = {2004},
|
||
series = {Vietnam Update Series},
|
||
publisher = {{Institute of Southeast Asian Studies}},
|
||
location = {{Singapore}},
|
||
abstract = {Social inequalities have grown during Vietnam's transition to a
|
||
market-based economy, even as average incomes have increased and
|
||
the number of people living in poverty has lessened. Do widening
|
||
social rifts - between rich and poor, urban and rural communities
|
||
and along regional, gender and ethnic lines - have the potential
|
||
to undermine Vietnam's liberal reforms and its integration with
|
||
its region? How has the socialist state responded to these
|
||
challenges? Based on research and analysis of recent conditions,
|
||
Social Inequality in Vietnam and the Challenges to Reform offers
|
||
detailed descriptions of disparities in income, spatial access,
|
||
gender, ethnicity and status, addressing their causes and
|
||
consequences. The eleven chapters in this book illustrate the
|
||
changing ways in which people have accumulated wealth, social and
|
||
cultural capital in Vietnam's move from a socialist to a
|
||
market-oriented society. They assemble data from the Northern
|
||
Uplands to the Mekong delta to explore geographic variability in
|
||
patterns of social differentiation. Offering critical insights
|
||
into state policy, the chapters assess the adequacy of government
|
||
responses and outline local responses and informal solutions to
|
||
social disadvantage. This book features a diverse mix of
|
||
theoretical and methodological approaches and bridges some of the
|
||
disciplinary and institutional divides that have impeded
|
||
understanding of inequality in Vietnam. The wide range of themes
|
||
it covers will make it a sought-after resource for those
|
||
interested in contemporary Vietnam and the effects of liberal
|
||
reforms, globalization and post-socialist development strategies.
|
||
},
|
||
eventtitle = {Vietnam {{Update Conference}}},
|
||
isbn = {978-981-230-275-5 978-981-230-254-0},
|
||
pagetotal = {392},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{ThanhThiPham2020,
|
||
title = {Vulnerability Assessment of Households to Flash Floods and
|
||
Landslides in the Poor Upland Regions of {{Vietnam}}},
|
||
author = {Thanh Thi Pham, Nga and Nong, Duy and Raghavan Sathyan, Archana
|
||
and Garschagen, Matthias},
|
||
date = {2020},
|
||
journaltitle = {Climate Risk Management},
|
||
shortjournal = {Climate Risk Management},
|
||
volume = {28},
|
||
pages = {100215},
|
||
issn = {22120963},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.crm.2020.100215},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/VZJ2IRQK/Thanh Thi Pham2020_Vulnerability
|
||
assessment of households to flash floods and landslides in the.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{ThuLe2014,
|
||
title = {Inequality in {{Vietnamese Urban-Rural Living Standards}},
|
||
1993-2006},
|
||
author = {Thu Le, Huong and Booth, Alison L.},
|
||
date = {2014},
|
||
journaltitle = {Review of Income and Wealth},
|
||
shortjournal = {Review of Income and Wealth},
|
||
volume = {60},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
issn = {00346586},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/roiw.12051},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {inequality::rural,status::skimmed,topic::education},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/VYQT833H/Thu Le2014_Inequality in
|
||
Vietnamese Urban-Rural Living Standards, 1993-2006.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@incollection{Tolo2014,
|
||
title = {Local and Indigenous Knowledge Systems in Subsistence Agriculture,
|
||
Climate Risk Management, and Mitigation of Community Vulnerability
|
||
in Changing Climate, Lake {{Victoria}} Basin: A Case Study of {{
|
||
Rakai}} and {{Isingiro}} Districts, {{Uganda}}},
|
||
booktitle = {Nile River Basin},
|
||
author = {Tolo, Casim Umba and Majule, Enock Amos and Lejju, Julius Bunny},
|
||
date = {2014},
|
||
pages = {451--473},
|
||
publisher = {{Springer}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,irrelevant::abstract,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/U472PGND/Tolo2014_Local and indigenous
|
||
knowledge systems in subsistence agriculture, climate risk.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{TsouckIbounde2021,
|
||
title = {Djibouti {{Economic Monitor}}: {{Navigating}} through the {{
|
||
Pandemic}} and {{Regional Tensions}}},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/237751646144451455/Djibouti-Economic-Monitor-Navigating-through-the-Pandemic-and-Regional-Tensions
|
||
},
|
||
keywords = {country::Djibouti,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/BM6ZY8AB/Tsouck Ibounde2020_Tsouck
|
||
Ibounde,Rick Emery Wes,Marina Mohammed,Nadir Le Borgne,Eric.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Twongyirwe2019,
|
||
title = {Perceived Effects of Drought on Household Food Security in {{
|
||
South-western Uganda}}: {{Coping}} Responses and Determinants},
|
||
shorttitle = {Perceived Effects of Drought on Household Food Security in {{
|
||
South-western Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Twongyirwe, Ronald and Mfitumukiza, David and Barasa, Bernard and
|
||
Naggayi, Barbara R. and Odongo, Hannington and Nyakato, Viola and
|
||
Mutoni, Grace},
|
||
date = {2019-06},
|
||
journaltitle = {Weather and Climate Extremes},
|
||
shortjournal = {Weather and Climate Extremes},
|
||
volume = {24},
|
||
pages = {100201},
|
||
issn = {22120947},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/j.wace.2019.100201},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,level::local,status::skimmed,topic::agriculture,
|
||
topic::climate_change,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/KLIPN9XR/Twongyirwe2019_Perceived effects
|
||
of drought on household food security in South-western Uganda.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{UNHCR2020,
|
||
title = {Nakivale {{Settlement}} Profile},
|
||
author = {UNHCR},
|
||
date = {2020},
|
||
number = {HS/029/20E},
|
||
institution = {{United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees}},
|
||
location = {{Geneva}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,topic::refugee},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/2NPXANQ6/UNHCRNakivale Settlement
|
||
profile.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{UNHCR2022,
|
||
title = {Uganda Refugee Emergency: {{Situation}} Report},
|
||
author = {UNHCR},
|
||
date = {2022-08},
|
||
series = {Inter-{{Agency Situation Report}}},
|
||
institution = {{United Nations High Commissioner For Refugees}},
|
||
location = {{Geneva}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,topic::refugee},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/LX2SGCK9/UNHCR2022_Uganda refugee
|
||
emergency.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@dataset{UNU-WIDER2022,
|
||
title = {World {{Income Inequality Database}} ({{WIID}}) {{Companion}} – {{
|
||
Version}} 30 {{June}} 2022},
|
||
author = {{UNU-WIDER}},
|
||
date = {2022-06-30},
|
||
publisher = {{United Nations University World Institute for Development
|
||
Economics Research}},
|
||
doi = {10.35188/UNU-WIDER/WIIDcomp-300622},
|
||
abstract = {The WIID Companion reports annual country and global per capita
|
||
income distributions at the percentile level.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@dataset{UNU-WIDER2022a,
|
||
title = {World {{Income Inequality Database}} ({{WIID}}) – {{Version}} 30 {{
|
||
June}} 2022},
|
||
author = {{UNU-WIDER}},
|
||
date = {2022-06-30},
|
||
publisher = {{United Nations University World Institute for Development
|
||
Economics Research}},
|
||
doi = {10.35188/UNU-WIDER/WIID-300622},
|
||
abstract = {WIID provides the most comprehensive set of income inequality
|
||
statistics available. With this current WIID version, the
|
||
observations now reach the year 2019 and covers 200 countries
|
||
(including historical entities) with over 20,000 data points in
|
||
total. There are now more than 3,700 unique country-year
|
||
observations in the database.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,country::Djibouti,country::Ethiopia,
|
||
country::Uganda,country::Vietnam},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{VanDePoel2009,
|
||
title = {What Explains the Rural-Urban Gap in Infant Mortality: {{Household}
|
||
} or Community Characteristics?},
|
||
shorttitle = {What Explains the Rural-Urban Gap in Infant Mortality},
|
||
author = {Van De Poel, Ellen and O'donnell, Owen and Van Doorslaer, Eddy},
|
||
date = {2009-11-01},
|
||
journaltitle = {Demography},
|
||
volume = {46},
|
||
number = {4},
|
||
pages = {827--850},
|
||
issn = {0070-3370, 1533-7790},
|
||
doi = {10.1353/dem.0.0074},
|
||
abstract = {Abstract The rural-urban gap in infant mortality rates is
|
||
explained by using a new decomposition method that permits
|
||
identification of the contribution of unobserved heterogeneity at
|
||
the household and the community level. Using Demographic and
|
||
Health Survey data for six Francophone countries in Central and
|
||
West sub-Saharan Africa, we find that differences in the
|
||
distributions of factors that determine mortality-not differences
|
||
in their effects-explain almost the entire gap. Higher infant
|
||
mortality rates in rural areas mainly derive from the rural
|
||
disadvantage in household characteristics, both observed and
|
||
unobserved, which explain two-thirds of the gap. Among the
|
||
observed characteristics, environmental factors-a safe source of
|
||
drinking water, electricity, and quality of housing materials-are
|
||
the most important contributors. Community characteristics
|
||
explain less than onequarter of the gap, with about two-thirds of
|
||
this coming from community unobserved heterogeneity and one-third
|
||
from the existence of a health facility within the community. The
|
||
effect of disadvantageous environmental conditions-such as
|
||
limited electricity and water supply-derives both from a lack of
|
||
community-level infrastructure and from the inability of some
|
||
households to exploit it when available. Policy needs to operate
|
||
at both the community and household levels to correct such
|
||
deficiencies.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,status::skimmed,topic::electricity,topic::health,
|
||
topic::rural,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/T48RNP2K/Van De Poel2009_What explains
|
||
the rural-urban gap in infant mortality.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{vandeVen2021,
|
||
title = {Living Income Benchmarking of Rural Households in Low-Income
|
||
Countries},
|
||
author = {van de Ven, Gerrie W. J. and de Valenca, Anne and Marinus, Wytze
|
||
and de Jager, Ilse and Descheemaeker, Katrien K. E. and Hekman,
|
||
Willem and Mellisse, Beyene Teklu and Baijukya, Frederick and Omari
|
||
, Mwantumu and Giller, Ken E.},
|
||
options = {useprefix=true},
|
||
date = {2021-06},
|
||
journaltitle = {FOOD SECURITY},
|
||
volume = {13},
|
||
number = {3},
|
||
pages = {729--749},
|
||
issn = {1876-4517},
|
||
doi = {10.1007/s12571-020-01099-8},
|
||
abstract = {The extreme poverty line is the most commonly used benchmark for
|
||
poverty, set at US\$ 1.90 by the World Bank. Another benchmark,
|
||
based on the Anker living wage methodology, is the remuneration
|
||
received for a standard work week necessary for a worker to meet
|
||
his/her family's basic needs in a particular place. The living
|
||
wage concept has been used extensively to address incomes of
|
||
plantation workers producing agricultural commodities for
|
||
international markets. More recently intense discussion has
|
||
emerged concerning the `living income' of smallholder farmers who
|
||
produce commodities for international supply chains on their own
|
||
land. In this article we propose a simple method that can be used
|
||
in all types of development projects to benchmark a rural `living
|
||
income'. We launch the Living Income Methodology, as adapted from
|
||
the Living Wage Methodology, to estimate the living income for
|
||
rural households. In any given location this requires about one
|
||
week of fieldwork. We express it per adult equivalent per day
|
||
(AE/day) and data collection is focused on rural households and
|
||
their immediate surroundings. Our three case studies showed that
|
||
in 2017 in Lushoto District, rural Tanzania, the living income
|
||
was US\$ PPP 4.04/AE/day, in Isingiro District, rural Uganda,
|
||
3.82 and in Sidama Zone, rural Ethiopia, 3.60. In all cases, the
|
||
extreme poverty line of US\$ PPP 1.90 per capita per day is
|
||
insufficient to meet the basic human rights for a decent living
|
||
in low-income countries. The Living Income Methodology provides a
|
||
transparent local benchmark that can be used to assess
|
||
development opportunities of rural households, by employers in
|
||
rural areas, including farmers hiring in labour, while respecting
|
||
basic human rights on a decent living. It can be used to reflect
|
||
on progress of rural households in low-income countries on their
|
||
aspired path out of poverty. It further provides a meaningful
|
||
benchmark to measure progress on Sustainable Development Goal 1,
|
||
eliminating poverty, and 2, zero hunger and sustainable food
|
||
systems, allowing for consideration of the local context.},
|
||
earlyaccessdate = {SEP 2020},
|
||
eissn = {1876-4525},
|
||
orcid-numbers = {Giller, Ken E/0000-0002-5998-4652 Mellisse, Beyene
|
||
Teklu/0000-0001-5779-0742 van de Ven,
|
||
Gerrie/0000-0001-5693-0280 Descheemaeker,
|
||
Katrien/0000-0003-0184-2034},
|
||
researcherid-numbers = {Mellisse, Beyene/AHB-8424-2022 Giller, Ken
|
||
E/K-2799-2012 Descheemaeker, Katrien/F-3041-2010},
|
||
unique-id = {WOS:000573406200001},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,level::local,status::skimmed,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/WWZJBHZB/van de Ven2021_Living income
|
||
benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{vandeWalle2001,
|
||
title = {Sources of Ethnic Inequality in {{Viet Nam}}},
|
||
author = {van de Walle, Dominique and Gunewardena, Dileni},
|
||
options = {useprefix=true},
|
||
date = {2001-06},
|
||
journaltitle = {Journal of Development Economics},
|
||
shortjournal = {Journal of Development Economics},
|
||
volume = {65},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {177--207},
|
||
issn = {03043878},
|
||
doi = {10.1016/S0304-3878(01)00133-X},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::ethnicity,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::rural},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/LDMZ9SGR/van de Walle2001_Sources of
|
||
ethnic inequality in Viet Nam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{vandeWalle2004,
|
||
title = {Is the Emerging Non-Farm Market Economy the Route out of Poverty in
|
||
{{Vietnam}}?},
|
||
author = {van de Walle, Dominique and Cratty, Dorothyjean},
|
||
options = {useprefix=true},
|
||
date = {2004-06},
|
||
journaltitle = {The Economics of Transition},
|
||
shortjournal = {Economics of Transition},
|
||
volume = {12},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
pages = {237--274},
|
||
issn = {0967-0750, 1468-0351},
|
||
doi = {10.1111/j.0967-0750.2004.00178.x},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::income,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::modernization,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/GHYIGV7U/van de Walle2004_Is the emerging
|
||
non-farm market economy the route out of poverty in Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{VASS2006,
|
||
title = {Vietnam {{Poverty Update Report}} 2006: {{Poverty}} and {{Poverty
|
||
Reduction}} in {{Vietnam}} 1993-2004},
|
||
author = {VASS},
|
||
date = {2006},
|
||
institution = {{Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences}},
|
||
location = {{Hanoi}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,topic::poverty},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{VASS2011,
|
||
title = {Poverty {{Reduction}} in {{Vietnam}}: {{Achievements}} and {{
|
||
Challenges}}},
|
||
author = {VASS},
|
||
date = {2011},
|
||
institution = {{Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences}},
|
||
location = {{Hanoi}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/TMVA9NCG/VASS2011_Poverty Reduction in
|
||
Vietnam.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Walker2021,
|
||
title = {Role of Women in Economic Development: {{A}} Comparison of the
|
||
Development Trajectories in Ethiopia and Uganda},
|
||
author = {Walker, Ally and Kulkarni, Kishore G},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
journaltitle = {The Journal of developing areas},
|
||
volume = {55},
|
||
number = {2},
|
||
pages = {387--396},
|
||
publisher = {{Tennessee State University}},
|
||
location = {{Nashville}},
|
||
issn = {1548-2278},
|
||
doi = {10.1353/jda.2021.0026},
|
||
abstract = {Historically, women's contributions to the economic, political,
|
||
and social well-being of a society have been dramatically
|
||
devalued. It is only in the last fifty years that the thinking
|
||
towards the role of women has shifted. Today, there is general
|
||
global consensus that female empowerment is "smart economics" and
|
||
that gender equality has a positive effect on economic growth and
|
||
human development. The inverse relationship, that economic growth
|
||
has a positive effect on advancing gender equality is more
|
||
controversial and understudied. To gain a broader picture of the
|
||
role of women in economic development, as well as a more nuanced
|
||
understanding of the relationship between economic growth and
|
||
gender equality, this paper situates women within the human
|
||
development paradigm and first explores the notion of economic
|
||
empowerment. A discussion of the importance of women's
|
||
empowerment to economic development follows. With this framework
|
||
laid, the context of economic development and gender equity in
|
||
East Africa is explored, followed by two specific case studies of
|
||
Ethiopia and Uganda. This paper draws several conclusions about
|
||
the role of women in the economic development trajectories of
|
||
Ethiopia and Uganda, namely that discrimination and
|
||
marginalization of women in Ethiopia and Uganda has limited both
|
||
women's roles economic development and impeded their human
|
||
development. In the Ethiopian and Ugandan economies, women do not
|
||
participate in high growth sectors and a majority of women, if
|
||
employed, work in the agriculture sector with substantially
|
||
unequal access and control over productive resources. In both
|
||
nations, girls are expected to attend less school than boys,
|
||
resulting in lower literacy compared with their male
|
||
counterparts. In health, life expectancy has improved
|
||
substantially in both Ethiopia and Uganda and girls have a higher
|
||
life expectancy than boys at birth. Despite said advances,
|
||
fertility rates remain astronomically high in both Ethiopia and
|
||
Uganda, which curbs (sustained) economic growth potential and
|
||
women's empowerment. This evidence suggests that if Ethiopia and
|
||
Uganda significantly increase economic and educational
|
||
opportunities for women, while maintaining gains in healthcare,
|
||
fertility rates will decrease and more sustained economic growth
|
||
can occur, which will ultimately have positive gains for women's
|
||
empowerment and for development.},
|
||
copyright = {COPYRIGHT 2021 Tennessee State University},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/7AQXA3SR/Walker2021_Role of women in
|
||
economic development.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{WorldBank2012,
|
||
title = {Vietnam Poverty Assessment: Well Begun, Not yet Done - {{Vietnam}}
|
||
's Remarkable Progress on Poverty Reduction and the Emerging
|
||
Challenges},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2012},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/563561468329654096/2012-Vietnam-poverty-assessment-well-begun-not-yet-done-Vietnams-remarkable-progress-on-poverty-reduction-and-the-emerging-challenges
|
||
},
|
||
editora = {Badiani-Magnusson, Reena C. and Baulch, Bob and Brandt, Loren and
|
||
Vu, Dat Hoang and Nguyen, Giang Tam and Gibson, John and Giles,
|
||
John T. and Hinsdale, Ian Palmer and Hung, Pham Manh and Kozel,
|
||
Valerie J. and Lanjouw, Peter F. and Marra, Marleen and Ngoc, Vu
|
||
Van and Phuong, Nguyen Thi and Schuler, Paul Joseph and Thang,
|
||
Nguyen Chien and Hoang, Thanh Xuan and Le, Trung Dang and Tung,
|
||
Phung Duc and Cuong, Nguyen Viet and Vu, Linh Hoang and Wells Dang
|
||
, Andrew},
|
||
editoratype = {collaborator},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/KC72ZFUP/Badiani-Magnusson2012_Vietnam
|
||
poverty assessment.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{WorldBank2016,
|
||
title = {Uganda {{Poverty Assessment Report}} 2016},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2016},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
https://thedocs.worldbank.org/en/doc/381951474255092375-0010022016/Uganda-Poverty-Assessment-Report-2016
|
||
},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/NUGTKD2Y/WorldBank2016_Uganda Poverty
|
||
Assessment Report 2016.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{WorldBank2021,
|
||
title = {Tracking {{SDG}} 7: {{The Energy Progress}} {{Report}}},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2021},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
editora = {World Bank and IEA and IRENA and UNSD and WHO},
|
||
editoratype = {collaborator},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/F8CBQJZA/World Bank2021_Tracking SDG
|
||
7.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{WorldBank2022,
|
||
title = {Uganda - {{Learning Poverty Brief}}},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2022},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099021407212243534/IDU01dbf45100704f046410bb6f03c4c1cb85588
|
||
},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::education,status::read,
|
||
topic::education},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/ILZVZJLF/WorldBank2022_Uganda - Learning
|
||
Poverty Brief.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{WorldBank2022a,
|
||
title = {Benin - {{Learning Poverty Brief}}},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2022},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099021407212243534/IDU01dbf45100704f046410bb6f03c4c1cb85588
|
||
},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,inequality::education,status::read,
|
||
topic::education},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/LY2GR4JD/WorldBank2022_Benin - Learning
|
||
Poverty Brief.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{WorldBank2022b,
|
||
title = {Macro {{Poverty Outlook}} for {{Benin}} : {{April}} 2022},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2022},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099930404182210208/IDU0ef8057e509b5f0432c0b50d00f85b54deb33
|
||
},
|
||
keywords = {country::Benin,status::read,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/EWU6G456/WorldBank2022_Macro Poverty
|
||
Outlook for Benin.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{WorldBank2022c,
|
||
title = {Macro {{Poverty Outlook}} for {{Djibouti}} : {{April}} 2022},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2022},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/099310104232265208/idu08979c8f809e1604dc70be93050dce6a02a23
|
||
},
|
||
keywords = {country::Djibouti,status::read,topic::poverty},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/GP5993W5/World Bank2022_Macro Poverty
|
||
Outlook for Djibouti.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@report{WorldBank2022d,
|
||
title = {Djibouti {{Gender Landscape}}},
|
||
author = {{World Bank}},
|
||
date = {2022},
|
||
series = {Country {{Gender Landscape}}},
|
||
institution = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington, D.C.}},
|
||
url = {
|
||
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099929206302212659/IDU068dce0c7003280435b099f8040232925d37f
|
||
},
|
||
keywords = {country::Djibouti,inequality::gender,status::read,topic::gender},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/LR8Z2RKE/World Bank2022_Djibouti Gender
|
||
Landscape.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@book{WorldBankWashingtonDistrictofColumbia2020,
|
||
title = {Poverty and {{Shared Prosperity}} 2020: Reversals of Fortune},
|
||
shorttitle = {Poverty and {{Shared Prosperity}} 2020},
|
||
editor = {World Bank (Washington, District of Columbia)},
|
||
date = {2020},
|
||
series = {Poverty and Shared Prosperity},
|
||
publisher = {{World Bank}},
|
||
location = {{Washington}},
|
||
abstract = {"Previous Poverty and Shared Prosperity reports have conveyed
|
||
the difficult message that the world is not on track to meet the
|
||
global goal of reducing extreme poverty to 3 percent by 2030.
|
||
This edition brings the unwelcome news that COVID-19, along with
|
||
conflict and climate change, has not merely slowed global poverty
|
||
reduction but reversed it for first time in over twenty years.
|
||
With COVID-19 predicted to push up to 100 million additional
|
||
people into extreme poverty in 2020, trends in global poverty
|
||
rates will be set back at least three years over the next decade.
|
||
Today, 40 percent of the global poor live in fragile or
|
||
conflict-affected situations, a share that could reach two-thirds
|
||
by 2030. Multiple effects of climate change could drive an
|
||
estimated 65 to 129 million people into poverty in the same
|
||
period. "Reversing the reversal" will require responding
|
||
effectively to COVID-19, conflict, and climate change while not
|
||
losing focus on the challenges that most poor people continue to
|
||
face most of the time. Though these are distinctive types of
|
||
challenges, there is much to be learned from the initial response
|
||
to COVID-19 that has broader implications for development policy
|
||
and practice, just as decades of addressing more familiar
|
||
development challenges yield insights that can inform responses
|
||
to today's unfamiliar but daunting ones. Solving novel problems
|
||
requires rapid learning, open cooperation, and strategic
|
||
coordination by everyone: from political leaders and scientists
|
||
to practitioners and citizens"--},
|
||
isbn = {978-1-4648-1602-4},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/NTSPMLHE/World Bank (Washington, District
|
||
of Columbia)2020_Poverty and Shared Prosperity 2020.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Yikii2017,
|
||
title = {Prevalence of Household Food Insecurity in Wetland Adjacent Areas
|
||
of {{Uganda}}},
|
||
author = {Yikii, Fred and Turyahabwe, Nelson and Bashaasha, Bernard},
|
||
date = {2017},
|
||
journaltitle = {Agriculture \& food security},
|
||
volume = {6},
|
||
number = {1},
|
||
pages = {1--12},
|
||
publisher = {{BioMed Central}},
|
||
keywords = {country::Uganda,inequality::education,inequality::health,
|
||
status::skimmed,topic::climate_change,topic::poverty,topic::rural
|
||
,topic::water},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/43YUJHEM/Yikii2017_Prevalence of
|
||
household food insecurity in wetland adjacent areas of Uganda.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
@article{Ylipaa2019,
|
||
title = {Climate Change Adaptation and Gender Inequality: {{Insights}} from
|
||
Rural Vietnam},
|
||
author = {Ylipaa, Josephine and Gabrielsson, Sara and Jerneck, Anne},
|
||
date = {2019},
|
||
journaltitle = {Sustainability (Basel, Switzerland)},
|
||
volume = {11},
|
||
number = {10},
|
||
pages = {2805-},
|
||
publisher = {{MDPI AG}},
|
||
location = {{Basel}},
|
||
issn = {2071-1050},
|
||
doi = {10.3390/su11102805},
|
||
abstract = {Vietnam is one of the countries most vulnerable to climate
|
||
change impacts, especially from extreme weather events such as
|
||
storms and floods. Thus, climate change adaptation is crucial,
|
||
especially for natural resource-dependent farmers. Based on a
|
||
qualitative research approach using a feminist political ecology
|
||
lens, this article investigates gendered patterns of rural
|
||
agrarian livelihoods and climate adaptation in the province of
|
||
Thái Bình. In doing so, we identify differentiated rights and
|
||
responsibilities between female and male farmers, leading to
|
||
unequal opportunities and immobility for females, making them
|
||
more vulnerable to climate impacts and threatening to reduce
|
||
their capacity to adapt. This research also shows that demands on
|
||
farmers to contribute to perpetual increases in agricultural
|
||
output by the state poses a challenge, since farming livelihoods
|
||
in Vietnam are increasingly becoming feminised, as a result of
|
||
urbanisation and devaluation of farming. Past and present
|
||
national strategies and provincial implementation plans linked to
|
||
climate change do not consider the burden affecting rural female
|
||
farmers, instead the focus lies on addressing technical solutions
|
||
to adaptation. With little attention being paid to an
|
||
increasingly female workforce, existing gender inequalities may
|
||
be exacerbated, threatening the future existence of rural
|
||
livelihoods and the viability of Vietnam’s expansion into global
|
||
markets.},
|
||
copyright = {2019. This work is licensed under
|
||
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”).
|
||
Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use
|
||
this content in accordance with the terms of the License.},
|
||
langid = {english},
|
||
keywords = {country::Vietnam,inequality::gender,status::skimmed,
|
||
topic::climate_change},
|
||
file = {/home/marty/Zotero/storage/5RH9PBTL/Ylipaa2019_Climate change
|
||
adaptation and gender inequality.pdf},
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
|