Can the Implementation of Social Protection Policies and Programme Reducing Households and Community Vulnerability to Poverty in Uganda?

Type Journal Article - Public Policy and Administration Research
Title Can the Implementation of Social Protection Policies and Programme Reducing Households and Community Vulnerability to Poverty in Uganda?
Author(s)
Volume 5
Issue 10
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
Page numbers 15-23
URL http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/bitstream/245742/2/Julius Okello - 26692-29346-1-PB.pdf
Abstract
The existence of disconnected and overlapping research findings on who are the vulnerable groups in postconflict
communities of Uganda continues to mingle around the mind of scholarly researchers, policy and
decision makers. Most of these groups have had specific research studies conducted and strategic policies
designed to address the findings. This article tries to provide an approach to understanding of the concept of
vulnerability from social protection perspective. In this regards, the paper looks at and reviews available text on
who are vulnerable group in Ugandan context and then focus on more general issues of poverty and vulnerability
at household and community level. It further examines the causes of household and community vulnerability to
poverty and suggests what social protection interventions provided by the state and non-state actors in reducing
their vulnerability to poverty can do. The vulnerable communities reviewed are those households and
communities members emerging from inter-intra-conflicts in northern and eastern Uganda. The article begins
with an overview of poverty trends and distribution and identifies who are the vulnerable poor in the context of
Uganda. For this paper, we define or identify vulnerable households as those persons living in one roof of a
home and are always susceptible to shocks and risks such as limited access to education, health facilities, shelter,
safe and clean drinking waters, while the paper identifies vulnerable communities as those communities with no
or existing poor social infrastructures such as medical facilities, bad roads and old building school structures.

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