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Chronic Poverty Advisory Network

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“We will die in poverty before dying by COVID”: Young adults and multilayered crises in Afghanistan

December 16, 2022 CPAN

Afghanistan experienced an extraordinary situation in 2021 that presents a complex example of how an intensified level of conflict and the global COVID-19 pandemic of added to an increasing prevalence of drought due to climate change has been affecting people’s livelihoods from different angles. In pre-August 2021, the country experienced record-level violence across the provinces. This was followed by the gradual fall of districts, provinces and finally the capital Kabul into the hands of the current de facto authorities, the Taliban.

Meanwhile, like any other part of the world, Afghanistan also experienced the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, which hindered people’s access to jobs, health care and different sources of revenue. Alongside this, the second-worst drought in 4 years (IFRC, 2021) has widely affected the livelihoods of the majority of people who rely on agriculture and livestock as the sole source of income.

There has been limited research into how these situations have combined to affect livelihoods and wellbeing in Afghanistan. This article attempts to advance understanding of this issue and promote research that investigates overlapped crises.

Read the full synthesis paper here.

In Research Report Tags Afghanistan, poverty, Covid-19
← The Pandemic, Informality and Poverty: Rethinking Economic Policy Responses to the Informal EconomyVulnerability in Afghanistan before and during the shift in power →
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