213 research outputs found
Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Africa : how civil registration and vital statistics systems supported an emergency response
CRVS systems are essential services, providing critical mortality data and legal identity that underpin safety nets and public services. Developing measures to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on the registration of vital events is critical. The United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), with the support of the Centre for Excellence for Civil Registration and Vital Statistics (CRVS) systems, is using its convening role to provide technical assistance to African countries. The programme will reinforce digital tools that make it possible to notify and register vital events as they occur.Global Affairs Canada (GAC
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Livelihood diversification and the expansion of artisanal mining in rural Tanzania: drivers and policy implications
This paper provides an extended analysis of livelihood diversification in rural Tanzania, with special emphasis on artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM). Over the past decade, this sector of industry, which is labour-intensive and comprises an array of rudimentary and semi-mechanized operations, has become an indispensable economic activity throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, providing employment to a host of redundant public sector workers, retrenched large-scale mine labourers and poor farmers. In many of the region’s rural areas, it is overtaking subsistence agriculture as the primary industry. Such a pattern appears
to be unfolding within the Morogoro and Mbeya regions of southern Tanzania, where findings from recent research suggest that a growing number of smallholder farmers are turning to ASM for employment and financial support. It is imperative that national rural development programmes take this trend into account and provide support to these people
Mind the gap? Civil society policy engagement and the pursuit of gender justice: critical discourse analysis of the implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action in Africa 2003–2015
This article presents critical discourse analysis of state and civil society organisations’ efforts to implement the gender mainstreaming goals set out in the United Nations’ Beijing Declaration. It is argued that the latter represents a generational opportunity to apply a Feminist Political Economic Framework to development in Africa. However, the research findings show how current practice falls short of the sought-after participative democratic model of mainstreaming. Instead, analysis reveals significant differences in state and civil society organisations’ policy framing, issues over conceptual clarity and a disjuncture in state and civil society prioritisation of key gendered issues such as poverty, economic inequality and conflict resolution. This matters because it indicates that the capacity of the civil sphere to act as a political arena from which NGOs may challenge the traditionally male-dominated power structures is being undermined by a ‘disconnect’ between state and civil society as they pursue contrasting agendas
Episiotomy and obstetric outcomes among women living with type 3 female genital mutilation: a secondary analysis
Age-specific mortality patterns in Central Mozambique during and after the end of the Civil War
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In recent years, vigorous debate has developed concerning how conflicts contribute to the spread of infectious diseases, and in particular, the role of post-conflict situations in the epidemiology of HIV/AIDS. This study details the age-specific mortality patterns among the population in the central provincial capital of Beira, Mozambique, during and after the Mozambican civil war which ended in 1992.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Data was collected from the death register at Beira's Central Hospital between 1985 and 2003 and descriptively analyzed.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The data show two distinct periods: before and after the peace agreements in 1992. Before 1992 (during the civil war), the main impact of mortality was on children below 5 years of age, including still births, accounting for 58% of all deaths. After the war ended in 1992, the pattern shifted dramatically and rapidly to the 15-49 year old age group which accounted for 49% of all deaths by 2003.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>As under-5 mortality rates were decreasing at the end of the conflict, rates for 24-49 year old adults began to dramatically increase due to AIDS. This study demonstrates that strategies can be implemented during conflicts to decrease mortality rates in one vulnerable population but post-conflict dynamics can bring together other factors which contribute to the rapid spread of other infectious diseases in other vulnerable populations.</p
Sustainable Consumption Behavior in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Conceptual Framework
This paper develops a conceptual framework for investigating the adoption patterns, inhibitors, and
facilitators ( PIF ) of sustainable consumption in sub-Sahara African ( SSA ) settings. Literature evidence
shows paucity of empirical studies on sustainable consumption from SSA , which partly explains lack
of suitable conceptual framework to guide research in this area. Also, the existing frameworks, which
were developed outside SSA may not be suitable for constructing sustainable consumption behavior
in SSA because of its peculiarities. The key signifi cance of this article is the potential of providing future
researchers in this area with a framework to guide and manage their studies. As a conceptual article,
insight was drawn from a plethora of scholarly articles in the domain of sustainable consumption and
related areas. The framework is built on four key constructs—adoption patterns, inhibitors, facilitators
( PIF ), and intention. As a guide for studies from the SSA , the article includes an empirical section,
which provides preliminary empirical validation for the proposed PIF conceptual framework based on
a pilot test. The result from the pilot study, using structural equation modeling ( SEM ), led to positing the
PIF Sustainable Consumption model, thus giving support for the PIF Conceptual Framework, which
this article puts forward. In addition, the proposed PIF conceptual framework is capable of providing
insight for crafting sustainability-related policies. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc
Growth by destination: the role of trade in Africa's recent growth episode
Over the period 1990–2009, Africa has experienced a distinct and favourable reversal in its growth fortunes in stark contrast to its performance in the preceding decades, leading to a variety of hypotheses seeking to explain the phenomenon. This paper presents both cross-country and panel-data evidence on the causal factors driving the recent turnaround in Africa's growth and takes the unique approach of disaggregating the separate growth impacts of Africa's bilateral trade with: China, Europe and America. The empirical analysis presented in this paper suggests that the primary and most robust causal factors driving Africa's recent growth turnaround are private sector- and foreign direct investment. Although empirical evidence of the role of bilateral trade openness in Africa's recent growth emerges within a fixed effect estimation setting, these results are not as robust when endogeneity and other issues are fully accounted for. Among the three major bilateral partners, Africa's bilateral trade with China has been a relatively important factor spurring growth on the continent and especially so in resource-rich, oil producing and non-landlocked countries. The econometric results are not as supportive of growth-inducing effects of foreign aid. These findings emerge after applying a variety of panel data specifications to the data, including the recent fixed Effects Filtered (FEF) estimator introduced by Pesaran and Zhou (2014) and the dynamic panel Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) estimator, which allows for endogeneity between trade and growth
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