Similar Items: Can social assistance reduce violent conflict and civil unrest? Evidence from a large-scale public works programme in Ethiopia
- Can social assistance reduce violent conflict and civil unrest? Evidence from a large-scale public works program in Ethiopia
- The gendered response to farmer-herder violent conflict in Nigeria
- Malnutrition and violent conflict in a heating world: A mediation analysis on the climate–conflict nexus in Nigeria
- Do safety net programs reduce conflict risk? Evidence from a large-scale public works program in Ethiopia
- Do social protection programs reduce conflict risk? Evidence from a large-scale safety net program in rural Ethiopia
- Reducing violence against women and girls
Author: Hirvonen, Kalle
- Displacement and development: Evidence from a graduation program for Somalia’s ultra-poor
- Implementer-Led Evaluation and Learning (IMPEL) evaluation of SPIR II RFSA - Midline survey report
- Temperature changes, household consumption, and internal migration: Evidence from Tanzania
- Child feeding practices in rural Ethiopia show increasing consumption of unhealthy foods
- Assessing community health information systems: Evidence from child health records in food insecure areas of the Ethiopian highlands
- Farm size, food security, and welfare: Descriptive evidence from the Ethiopian highlands
Author: Machado, Elia
- Can social assistance reduce violent conflict and civil unrest? Evidence from a large-scale public works program in Ethiopia
- Do social protection programs reduce conflict risk? Evidence from a large-scale safety net program in rural Ethiopia
- Can social assistance reduce violent conflict and civil unrest? Evidence from a large-scale public works programme in Ethiopia
- Do safety net programs reduce conflict risk? Evidence from a large-scale public works program in Ethiopia