Critical assessment of the socio-economic effects of civil war on women: a case study of Somali women refugees in Dadaab, Kenya (1991-2007)
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Date
1994Author
Mbithi, Stanslaus M
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
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This study was premised on the fact that the effects of civil wars on civilians is mixed
because they occasion severe socio-economic losses while at the same time inaugurating a long term process through which civilians in a polity secure their liberation from traditional structures largely viewed as oppressive. A paradox therefore exists. Civil wars turn out to be both a curse but also a blessing to civilians in the long run. This study focused on the conditions of Somali refugee women in the Dadaab camps Modernization provided the theoretical and conceptual guide.
Data obtained from the three refugee camps in Dadaab - Ifo, Hagadera and Dagahaley -
showed that refugee women have suffered immensely at three different stages, that is, in their villages/localities in Somalia when the war broke out in 1991, during their flight to
Kenya through Liboi town, and eventually upon their settlement in the camps. Refugee
women in Dadaab have faced the problems of rape, poverty, trauma, and dearth of basic
necessities for subsistence such as food, shelter, and security. Women have also suffered a sudden shift of gender roles which demands that they take up male responsibilities at a time when oppressive cultural practices such as female genital mutilation, early marriage, divorce/separations, etc are still religiously upheld by the Somali refugee community.
However, the dislocations wrought by the civil war and the consequent movement of the
war survivors to the camp has put the refugee women as well as other refugees to the
direct aid by international and local agencies. Various organizations and agencies
operating in Dadaab has made positive efforts to increase the educational and awareness levels of women in various spheres including legal and medical. A combination of police surveillance and application of international and national laws has also improved the protection of women and ensured slow but steady demise of the oppressive traditional practices. The aggregate impact of local and international interventions, coupled with unconscious adjustment of the refugee women to changed social context has led to their emergence as a more liberated individuals compared to their counterparts who remained still live in most parts of Somalia.
The study thus confirms the hypothesis that mixed impact of civil wars on women results
from the covert pressure to abandon traditional practices and world views that are
contradictory to the demands of modernity as advanced by the developed Western world.
Citation
Masters of Arts Degree in International StudiesPublisher
University of Nairobi Department of Arts International Studies
Description
A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment for the Degree of Master of Arts in International Sudies University of Nairobi