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Children, Youth and Environments Vol. 19 No. 2 (Fall 2009) ISSN: 1546-2250 Rethinking Poverty and Social Exclusion Responses in Post-Conflict Nepal:
Child-Sensitive Social ProtectionGabriele Köhler Marta Calì Mariana Stirbu Kathmandu, Nepal
Citation: Köhler, Gabriele, Marta Calì and Mariana Stirbu (2009). "Rethinking Poverty and Social Exclusion Responses in Post-Conflict Nepal:
Child-Sensitive Social Protection." Children, Youth and Environments 19 (2): 229-249. Retrieved [date] from http://www.colorado.edu/journals/cye/
Read this Article (PDF) | Comment on this Article AbstractNepal’s extraordinary political transition to peace and democracy has raised great
expectations of social change. The complex situation of pervasive poverty and
social exclusion exacerbated by Nepal's physical environment, as well as the post
conflict economic stagnation, call for new policy interventions. Based on political,
economic and social arguments, the paper makes the case for strengthening social
protection with the specific proposal of introducing a child grant—a cash transfer
from the government to families with children—which is presented as a possible
"building block" in the country's social protection system. It is also argued that a
grant could be more effective at addressing both child well-being and the broader
challenges of poverty and inequality if it were universal and unconditional. The
paper draws on primary data collected through surveys and focus group
discussions, combined with secondary sources and the authors' involvement in
some of the policy processes. It thus also represents a case study on the "theory
and practice" of developing child-sensitive social protection in a post-conflict
environment. Keywords: social policy, social protection, poverty, child poverty, child well-being, social exclusion, child benefit, child grant, post-conflict, peace dividend, Least Developed Country, Nepal
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