A Pilot Study of Ex-combatant Livelihoods and Social Networks around Goma
Designing a Gendered Analysis of Social Capital After War
Poverty and Conflict
Poverty and conflict are widely understood to be closely interconnected; with poverty making countries more prone to civil war, and armed conflict weakening governance and economic performance, thus increasing the risk of conflict relapse (Goodhand 2001). The selected readings in this pack move beyond reductive and harmful assumptions about ‘pathologies’ of poverty to examine the latest research into the poverty-conflict nexus. Earlier studies identified macro-level factors that made countries more likely to experience armed conflict.
History and Evolution of DDR and DDRR in DRC
History and Evolution of DDR and DDRR in DRC
Designing a Gendered Analysis of Social Capital After War
Victim Centred Approaches to Conflict-Related Reparations
A Pilot Study of Ex-combatant Livelihoods and Social Networks around Goma

Exploration of causal theories of conflict participation and empirical research on post-conflict development by measuring subjective and objective empowerment and disempowerment in context.
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