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The role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty and vulnerability in Katakwi District - Uganda

This study examined the role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty in the post-conflict area of Teso in Eastern Uganda and focused on Katakwi district. Mixed methods, was used in the form of qualitative and quantitative tools drawing on a sample of 200 respondents and 20 key...

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Main Author: Okello, Julius
Other Authors: Taylor, Viviene
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Social Development 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Okello, Julius
author2 Taylor, Viviene
author_browse Okello, Julius
Taylor, Viviene
author_facet Taylor, Viviene
Okello, Julius
author_sort Okello, Julius
collection Thesis
description This study examined the role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty in the post-conflict area of Teso in Eastern Uganda and focused on Katakwi district. Mixed methods, was used in the form of qualitative and quantitative tools drawing on a sample of 200 respondents and 20 key informant interviews and 30 participants who were part of focus group discussions. The study results showed that 45% of the sampled population in Katakwi district was poor; 20% were at risk of being poor if social protection is removed, and 35% not poor. We further established that 53% of the female non-beneficiaries live in poverty compared to 49% of female beneficiaries. In contrast, male beneficiaries (51%) were found to be living outside the poverty line compared to male non-beneficiaries (47%) who live in poverty (see Figure 4.2). This variation in poverty levels among male respondents is attributed to the overreliance of household beneficiaries to social protection services, which in most cases are delayed; hence, they fall back into poverty These findingsfurther show that social protection cash transfers constitute the most direct approach that the Government of Uganda uses to address household poverty and vulnerability. Social protection cash transfers can raise living standards; reduce the severity of poverty and vulnerability at the household level and distribute income to the poorest which, thus, reduces the poverty gap between the rich and poor. We further, established that male heads of households who shoulder the burden of paying school fees do not actually receive cash transfers. Factors that significantly influence the standard of life of households include having a university graduate in the household, receipt of income and access to social services. Access to social protection services such as education, health and water were shown to significantly influence a household's status. Although households in Katakwi district that receive social protection support have better chances of escaping poverty, the district is more susceptible to insecurity as a result of continued the cattle rustling compared to those districts that are not closer to cattle rustling warriors. The value of the study is that it provides a better understanding of social protection services in reducing household poverty in post-conflict areas. This study contributes to the limited body of literature on household heads experiences in dealing with vulnerability poverty and household vulnerability to community poverty in post-conflict settings. It provides a disaggregated analysis of social protection measures in responding to poverty and vulnerabilities at the household level.
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32313 The role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty and vulnerability in Katakwi District - Uganda Okello, Julius Taylor, Viviene Khosi, Kubeka Alvina social development This study examined the role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty in the post-conflict area of Teso in Eastern Uganda and focused on Katakwi district. Mixed methods, was used in the form of qualitative and quantitative tools drawing on a sample of 200 respondents and 20 key informant interviews and 30 participants who were part of focus group discussions. The study results showed that 45% of the sampled population in Katakwi district was poor; 20% were at risk of being poor if social protection is removed, and 35% not poor. We further established that 53% of the female non-beneficiaries live in poverty compared to 49% of female beneficiaries. In contrast, male beneficiaries (51%) were found to be living outside the poverty line compared to male non-beneficiaries (47%) who live in poverty (see Figure 4.2). This variation in poverty levels among male respondents is attributed to the overreliance of household beneficiaries to social protection services, which in most cases are delayed; hence, they fall back into poverty These findingsfurther show that social protection cash transfers constitute the most direct approach that the Government of Uganda uses to address household poverty and vulnerability. Social protection cash transfers can raise living standards; reduce the severity of poverty and vulnerability at the household level and distribute income to the poorest which, thus, reduces the poverty gap between the rich and poor. We further, established that male heads of households who shoulder the burden of paying school fees do not actually receive cash transfers. Factors that significantly influence the standard of life of households include having a university graduate in the household, receipt of income and access to social services. Access to social protection services such as education, health and water were shown to significantly influence a household's status. Although households in Katakwi district that receive social protection support have better chances of escaping poverty, the district is more susceptible to insecurity as a result of continued the cattle rustling compared to those districts that are not closer to cattle rustling warriors. The value of the study is that it provides a better understanding of social protection services in reducing household poverty in post-conflict areas. This study contributes to the limited body of literature on household heads experiences in dealing with vulnerability poverty and household vulnerability to community poverty in post-conflict settings. It provides a disaggregated analysis of social protection measures in responding to poverty and vulnerabilities at the household level. 2020-10-19T07:17:46Z 2020-10-19T07:17:46Z 2020 2020-10-19T07:16:50Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32313 eng application/pdf Department of Social Development Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle social development
Okello, Julius
The role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty and vulnerability in Katakwi District - Uganda
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty and vulnerability in Katakwi District - Uganda
title_full The role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty and vulnerability in Katakwi District - Uganda
title_fullStr The role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty and vulnerability in Katakwi District - Uganda
title_full_unstemmed The role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty and vulnerability in Katakwi District - Uganda
title_short The role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty and vulnerability in Katakwi District - Uganda
title_sort role of social protection programmes in reducing household poverty and vulnerability in katakwi district uganda
topic social development
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32313
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