32 research outputs found
Livelihood insecurity among urban households in Ethiopia
This study is based on a survey of households undertaken in the last
quarter of 2001 for ILO as part of the project entitled People's Security
Survey (PSS). The main objective of PSS was to try to capture people's
perceptions and normative values of "livelihood" security. The PSS
consists of a research framework developed by ILO focusing on poverty,
labor market experience, and access to social protection policies and
institutions of representation. The main instrument employed here was an
extensive questionnaire originally administered on a sample of 1609
households from both urban and rural areas. For the purposes of the
present work, we have removed the rural households in the sample to give
the study a wholly urban focus. The present work is thus based on the
findings of the survey of 1202 urban households. The towns in which the
survey was undertaken were Addis Ababa, Debre Zeit, Mojo and
Nazareth.
The findings of the study reveal a population that is fearful and anxious
about its basic subsistence, which is dependent on low and insecure
income, inadequate social services, a shrinking labor market, and which
is faced with gloomy prospects. It was evident that the great majority of
households are weighed down by livelihood insecurity, with the threat of
iv
impoverishment and loss of means for basic sustenance hanging over
them as a matter of course. The study reveals a great deal ofpessimism on
the part of many: pessimism about one's basic security, about employment
opportunities, and the chances for self-improvement. Most households are
doubtful if there will be economic growth, or if the problem of poverty will
be successfully tackled. Respondents were ashed to give their opinion
about government programs to reduce poverty on the one hand, and to
promote economic growth on the other. Obviously success in reducing
poverty and boosting economic growth will have a positive impact on
employment and business activity, and respondents were aware that the
two issues are closely linked with their own livelihood. A good majority
thought that the government's efforts on both counts were unsuccessful:
the figures were 64 percent and 59 percent respectively. Only about 28
percent thought the programs were successful
Democratic assistance to post-conflict Ethiopia: impact and limitations
There is a long history of donor relationship with Ethiopia going hack at
least to the early 1940s. Since then, the number of bi- and multi-lateral
donors providing assistance to the country has grown substantially. At
present, the U.S., Japan and the Scandinavian countries are the major
bilateral donors, while the World Bank, the EU and agencies in the UN
system provide the bulk of the multilateral assistance. The international
assistance that was offered to the country with the change of regime may
be grouped into three categories: a) development assistance; b)
humanitarian assistance; and c) assistance for democratization and good
governance.
Ethiopia has conducted a number of elections in the post-conflict
period, the last one being in 2000. At present, the country is bracing itself
for a third round of national elections in 2005. A comparison of election
costs for selected African countries with Ethiopia shows that the cost of
elections in Ethiopia has been quite low given the country's enormous size
and its lack of experience in running democratic elections. Ethiopia has
received considerable international electoral assistance since 1991 and
such assistance has strengthened the capacity of the National Electoral
Board and civil society and human rights organizations in monitoring and
supervising elections. Donor assistance has also been provided to
political parties to make the electoral process more competitive. However,
the impact of such assistance in democratizing the election process has
been limited because the ruling party has failed to broaden its political
power base and provide a level playing field for all contestants.
Human rights and advocacy organizations began to be established
for the first time in the country following the fall of the Derg and the
change of government. This has meant that the human rights record of the
present government has been more systematically monitored and rights
violations more extensively compiled than at any time in the past. Donor
assistance to human rights has primarily been financial assistance to
advocacy organizations on the one hand, and financial support as well as
training and technical support to government institutions on the other.
Assistance lias been provided for: a) preparatory work for setting up a
government human right commission and ombudsman institution; b)
reform of legal institutions, and training of law enforcement agencies; c)
support to legislative bodies and training of legislators; d) financial
support to civil society organizations active in monitoring human rights,
human rights protection and advocacy.
One of the first acts of the Transitional Government was to enact a
press law, which turned out to have a dramatic impact on the country's
media. At present, there are a large number of private papers published
regularly. However, the free press is faced by a host of problems:
structural, economic, and professional. International assistance to the
media (both public as well as private) has been limited in scope, and
relatively insignificant in terms of its impact. International donors have
failed to make a strategic intervention in the media sector and have been
limited to low level support with only limited results.
Donor assistance to the democratization process in Ethiopia has
been comparatively limited. In contrast, donors have invested heavily in
the humanitarian and relief effort on the one hand, and in the socioeconomic
development sectors on the other. Assistance to both sectors has
been growing in the last ten years, and in particular assistance to the
humanitarian sector has been increasing markedly in this period.
On the other hand, financial support to civil society, especially local
human rights and advocacy organizations, has been instrumental in
enabling the growth of the voluntary sector in the country. Without such
support, civil society would have faced serious difficulties, and its
achievements, especially in the areas of human rights monitoring, training
and advocacy, would have been more limited. On the other hand, the
impact of international assistance on the democratization process in this
country has been quite limited. The achievements registered to date in the
areas of elections, human rights and press freedom have primarily been a
product of local initiative, local organizations, and struggles by
stakeholders
Legalising land rights : local practices, state responses and tenure security in Africa, Asia and Latin America
Miljoenen mensen wonen en werken op land waarop zij geen officiC+le rechten hebben. Hun bezit wordt vaak wel beschermd door niet-statelijke rechten die wortelen in lokale gemeenschappen. Ontwikkelingsdeskundigen en donoren hebben lange tijd zulke onofficiC+le regelingen als een hinderpaal voor ontwikkeling gezien en gewerkt aan invoering van individueel eigendom en complexe registratie, teneinde investeringen in land, huis en bedrijfje aan te moedigen en de productiviteit te verhogen. Deze aanpak werkt niet en daarom wordt nu gezocht naar een nieuwe, pluralistischer aanpak die probeert lokale regelingen te erkennen en waar nodig te verbeteren. In dit boek worden zulke nieuwe benaderingen onderzocht. Experts uit acht landen in AziC+, Latijns-Amerika en Afrika behandelen eerst de landwetgeving en -politiek van hun land en komen dan met een concrete gevalstudie van zo'n nieuwe aanpak. Steeds is de vraag wat zo'n nieuwe statelijke aanpak van landrechten betekent in het dagelijkse leven van kleine boeren (ruraal), van bewoners van onofficiC+le stedelijke wijken (urbaan) en van mensen die onder de rook van de stad wonen en werken (peri-urbaan). Hoe zeker voelen zij zich nu van hun rechten (tenure security), kennen ze de nieuwe regeling en kunnen ze zich er effectief op beroepen (legal empowerment), werken de overheidsinstanties controleerbaar (control of bureaucrats)? Millions of people live and work on land that they do not legally own in accordance with enforceable state law. The absence of state recognition for local property rights affects people's tenure security and impedes development. Efforts to legalise extra-legal land tenure have traditionally emphasised individual titling and registration. Disappointment with such approaches have led to a search for 'a third way' in land tenure regulation that will reconcile state perspectives with local land rights. This book contributes to the quest for a new pluralistic approach. It combines the description of land tenure regimes in Africa, Latin America and Asia with an analysis of designs, objectives, and actual implementation of specific legalisation programmes. This allows for conclusions on the relationship between various kinds of legalisations and tenure security and the challenges to improve the design and implementation of legalisation programmes9789048506699 (eisbn
Ethiopia : social and political issues
The complete book of eleven chapters is presented in four sections, respectively covering issues related to governance, health, gender and land. This document encompasses Chapters 1 and 2, which contextualize issues through provision of background history and politics of Ethiopia (Chapter1); and ethnicity, language and education (Chapter2)
Famine and survival strategies : a case study from northeast Ethiopia
This study importantly changes the focus to what happens before a famine comes, and how the peasants prepare for it. Paradoxically, the author concludes that it is in the years of recovery that the seeds of famine are sown. The study revolves around a case study in the awraja (district) in the Ambassel Wollo province in northeastern Ethiopia. The author also critically examines other literature on famine response.Contents: Section I: INTRODUCTION – 1. Objectives of the study – Organization of the study – Section II: Famine: behind the mountains – 3. Wollo and Ambassel: the setting – 4. The economy of Wollo – 5. The peasant mode of production – 6. Famine in Wollo -- Section III: SURVIVAL: COMMUNITY AND COOPERATION -- 7. The Community in Distress -- 8. Survival Strategies -- 9. Post Famine Recovery -- Section IV: BEYOND SURVIVAL -- 10. Neither Feast nor Famine </p
Agrarian reform in Ethiopia
This book is the first full-length study of the land reform and the resultant social changes in rural Ethiopia.Contents: 1. Introduction -- 2. The agrarian system under the old -- 3. The land -- 4. Peasants and peasant associations -- 5. Peasants and agrarian reform -- 6. Select bibliography</p