Armed conflict and gendered participation in agri-food systems: Survey evidence from 1.8 million individuals in 29 countries

This paper provides empirical microlevel evidence on the gendered impacts of armed conflict on economic activity, combining sex-disaggregated employment survey data with temporally and spatially disaggregated conflict event data for 1.8 million individuals from 29 African countries. Specifically, we...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ronzani, Piero, Stojetz, Wolfgang, Azzarri, Carlo, Nico, Gianluigi, Mane, Erdgin, Brück, Tilman
Format: Ponencia
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136979
_version_ 1855542968094556160
author Ronzani, Piero
Stojetz, Wolfgang
Azzarri, Carlo
Nico, Gianluigi
Mane, Erdgin
Brück, Tilman
author_browse Azzarri, Carlo
Brück, Tilman
Mane, Erdgin
Nico, Gianluigi
Ronzani, Piero
Stojetz, Wolfgang
author_facet Ronzani, Piero
Stojetz, Wolfgang
Azzarri, Carlo
Nico, Gianluigi
Mane, Erdgin
Brück, Tilman
author_sort Ronzani, Piero
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This paper provides empirical microlevel evidence on the gendered impacts of armed conflict on economic activity, combining sex-disaggregated employment survey data with temporally and spatially disaggregated conflict event data for 1.8 million individuals from 29 African countries. Specifically, we study several employment outcomes related to participation in agri-food systems. Agri-food systems are embedded in ecological, economic and social processes, drive nutrition outcomes and are critically important for the development of developing countries. On average, we find that local conflict exposure is only weakly related to labor force participation, but strongly reduces the total amount of hours worked and increases engagement in the agricultural sector. These net impacts exist for both men and women. However, the reduction in hours worked is significantly stronger among men, while the increase in agricultural activity is significantly stronger among women. In the longer term, conflict impacts on employment two years later are stronger when no more conflict ensues, challenging the widespread idea of one-off conflict shocks ‘fading away’ over time, and suggesting that labor markets adapt to and absorb lasting conflict situations. Different types of conflict events have qualitatively similar impacts, which are strongest for explosions, such as from air strikes or landmines. Overall, our findings underline that armed conflict entails structural economic, social and institutional change, which create complex, gendered impacts on economic activity and agri-food systems.
format Ponencia
id CGSpace136979
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher International Food Policy Research Institute
publisherStr International Food Policy Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1369792025-03-13T19:11:48Z Armed conflict and gendered participation in agri-food systems: Survey evidence from 1.8 million individuals in 29 countries Ronzani, Piero Stojetz, Wolfgang Azzarri, Carlo Nico, Gianluigi Mane, Erdgin Brück, Tilman gender agriculture research violence conflict This paper provides empirical microlevel evidence on the gendered impacts of armed conflict on economic activity, combining sex-disaggregated employment survey data with temporally and spatially disaggregated conflict event data for 1.8 million individuals from 29 African countries. Specifically, we study several employment outcomes related to participation in agri-food systems. Agri-food systems are embedded in ecological, economic and social processes, drive nutrition outcomes and are critically important for the development of developing countries. On average, we find that local conflict exposure is only weakly related to labor force participation, but strongly reduces the total amount of hours worked and increases engagement in the agricultural sector. These net impacts exist for both men and women. However, the reduction in hours worked is significantly stronger among men, while the increase in agricultural activity is significantly stronger among women. In the longer term, conflict impacts on employment two years later are stronger when no more conflict ensues, challenging the widespread idea of one-off conflict shocks ‘fading away’ over time, and suggesting that labor markets adapt to and absorb lasting conflict situations. Different types of conflict events have qualitatively similar impacts, which are strongest for explosions, such as from air strikes or landmines. Overall, our findings underline that armed conflict entails structural economic, social and institutional change, which create complex, gendered impacts on economic activity and agri-food systems. 2023-10-10 2024-01-04T12:46:38Z 2024-01-04T12:46:38Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136979 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Ronzani, Piero; Stojetz, Wolfgang; Azzarri, Carlo; Nico, Gianluigi; Mane, Erdgin; Brück, Tilman. 2023. Armed conflict and gendered participation in agri-food systems: Survey evidence from 1.8 million individuals in 29 countries. Presentation. Presented at the CGIAR GENDER Conference 'From Research to Impact: Towards just and resilient agri-food systems', New Delhi, India, 9-12 October 2023. International Food Policy Research Institute. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136979
spellingShingle gender
agriculture
research
violence
conflict
Ronzani, Piero
Stojetz, Wolfgang
Azzarri, Carlo
Nico, Gianluigi
Mane, Erdgin
Brück, Tilman
Armed conflict and gendered participation in agri-food systems: Survey evidence from 1.8 million individuals in 29 countries
title Armed conflict and gendered participation in agri-food systems: Survey evidence from 1.8 million individuals in 29 countries
title_full Armed conflict and gendered participation in agri-food systems: Survey evidence from 1.8 million individuals in 29 countries
title_fullStr Armed conflict and gendered participation in agri-food systems: Survey evidence from 1.8 million individuals in 29 countries
title_full_unstemmed Armed conflict and gendered participation in agri-food systems: Survey evidence from 1.8 million individuals in 29 countries
title_short Armed conflict and gendered participation in agri-food systems: Survey evidence from 1.8 million individuals in 29 countries
title_sort armed conflict and gendered participation in agri food systems survey evidence from 1 8 million individuals in 29 countries
topic gender
agriculture
research
violence
conflict
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136979
work_keys_str_mv AT ronzanipiero armedconflictandgenderedparticipationinagrifoodsystemssurveyevidencefrom18millionindividualsin29countries
AT stojetzwolfgang armedconflictandgenderedparticipationinagrifoodsystemssurveyevidencefrom18millionindividualsin29countries
AT azzarricarlo armedconflictandgenderedparticipationinagrifoodsystemssurveyevidencefrom18millionindividualsin29countries
AT nicogianluigi armedconflictandgenderedparticipationinagrifoodsystemssurveyevidencefrom18millionindividualsin29countries
AT maneerdgin armedconflictandgenderedparticipationinagrifoodsystemssurveyevidencefrom18millionindividualsin29countries
AT brucktilman armedconflictandgenderedparticipationinagrifoodsystemssurveyevidencefrom18millionindividualsin29countries