The silent victims of humanitarian crises and livelihood (in)security: A case study among migrants in two Chadian towns

Once a humanitarian disaster receives coverage in the global media, the international community usually mobilises to reduce the most severe consequences. However people in Chad are experiencing endemic crises that are detached from speci!c triggers, and they are not receiving any international assis...

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Main Authors: Syntyche Nakar Djindil, Mirjam de Bruijn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2009-04-01
Series:Jàmbá : Journal of Disaster Risk Studies
Online Access:https://jamba.org.za/index.php/jamba/article/view/30
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spelling doaj-f67ebab095a44fb1b683c50f8e1993192020-11-24T22:26:42ZengAOSISJàmbá : Journal of Disaster Risk Studies1996-14212072-845X2009-04-012325327210.4102/jamba.v2i3.3030The silent victims of humanitarian crises and livelihood (in)security: A case study among migrants in two Chadian townsSyntyche Nakar Djindil0Mirjam de Bruijn1Wageningen University, Law and Governance Group, The NetherlandsAfrica Studies Centre, Leiden, The NetherlandsOnce a humanitarian disaster receives coverage in the global media, the international community usually mobilises to reduce the most severe consequences. However people in Chad are experiencing endemic crises that are detached from speci!c triggers, and they are not receiving any international assistance to help relieve the hardships they face. "is study involves 111 migrant households from central Chad that, as a result of war and drought, have lost everything and now have to live in squatter areas of N’Djamena and Mongo, facing uncertainty and threats while negotiating their livelihoods. Qualitative and quantitative methods have been combined in this study to reveal the intriguing story of their daily lives in the face of complex and endemic crises. Anthropometric and health data were generated to determine the nutritional status of mothers and their children under !ve. Life histories, in-depth interviews and participatory observation allowed the researchers to capture the negotiation strategies they use to access food and shelter, their experiences of food insecurity and sanitary vulnerability, and the consequences these have on daily life. Results indicate that 62% of households were female headed, there were high rates of acute (40-50%) and chronic (35-40%) malnutrition and 46% of the mothers were underweight and anaemic. Infant mortality rates were also high at 30%-42% and 97% of the children had had incomplete or no vaccinations. No households had access to clean water, sanitation or public-health services. Endemic corruption and abuse by the authorities were identi!ed as major sources of day-to-day insecurity. Theese migrants were not expecting any improvement in their livelihoods in the foreseeable future and saw these miserable conditions as normal.https://jamba.org.za/index.php/jamba/article/view/30
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Syntyche Nakar Djindil
Mirjam de Bruijn
spellingShingle Syntyche Nakar Djindil
Mirjam de Bruijn
The silent victims of humanitarian crises and livelihood (in)security: A case study among migrants in two Chadian towns
Jàmbá : Journal of Disaster Risk Studies
author_facet Syntyche Nakar Djindil
Mirjam de Bruijn
author_sort Syntyche Nakar Djindil
title The silent victims of humanitarian crises and livelihood (in)security: A case study among migrants in two Chadian towns
title_short The silent victims of humanitarian crises and livelihood (in)security: A case study among migrants in two Chadian towns
title_full The silent victims of humanitarian crises and livelihood (in)security: A case study among migrants in two Chadian towns
title_fullStr The silent victims of humanitarian crises and livelihood (in)security: A case study among migrants in two Chadian towns
title_full_unstemmed The silent victims of humanitarian crises and livelihood (in)security: A case study among migrants in two Chadian towns
title_sort silent victims of humanitarian crises and livelihood (in)security: a case study among migrants in two chadian towns
publisher AOSIS
series Jàmbá : Journal of Disaster Risk Studies
issn 1996-1421
2072-845X
publishDate 2009-04-01
description Once a humanitarian disaster receives coverage in the global media, the international community usually mobilises to reduce the most severe consequences. However people in Chad are experiencing endemic crises that are detached from speci!c triggers, and they are not receiving any international assistance to help relieve the hardships they face. "is study involves 111 migrant households from central Chad that, as a result of war and drought, have lost everything and now have to live in squatter areas of N’Djamena and Mongo, facing uncertainty and threats while negotiating their livelihoods. Qualitative and quantitative methods have been combined in this study to reveal the intriguing story of their daily lives in the face of complex and endemic crises. Anthropometric and health data were generated to determine the nutritional status of mothers and their children under !ve. Life histories, in-depth interviews and participatory observation allowed the researchers to capture the negotiation strategies they use to access food and shelter, their experiences of food insecurity and sanitary vulnerability, and the consequences these have on daily life. Results indicate that 62% of households were female headed, there were high rates of acute (40-50%) and chronic (35-40%) malnutrition and 46% of the mothers were underweight and anaemic. Infant mortality rates were also high at 30%-42% and 97% of the children had had incomplete or no vaccinations. No households had access to clean water, sanitation or public-health services. Endemic corruption and abuse by the authorities were identi!ed as major sources of day-to-day insecurity. Theese migrants were not expecting any improvement in their livelihoods in the foreseeable future and saw these miserable conditions as normal.
url https://jamba.org.za/index.php/jamba/article/view/30
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