Determinants of IDP Voice--Four Cases from Sierra Leone and Afghanistan

Using an interview-based case study methodology, this paper investigates how four groups of internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Afghanistan and Sierra Leone engage in existing frameworks of local governance with the aim of influencing political processes. In accordance with IDPs' priorities...

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Main Author: Esser, Daniel
Format: Working Paper
Language:en_US
Published: Inter-University Committee on International Migration 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/97622
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author Esser, Daniel
author_facet Esser, Daniel
author_sort Esser, Daniel
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description Using an interview-based case study methodology, this paper investigates how four groups of internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Afghanistan and Sierra Leone engage in existing frameworks of local governance with the aim of influencing political processes. In accordance with IDPs' priorities to ensure individual and communal recovery and the (re)creation of sustainable livelihoods, security of land tenure and employment creation receive particular attention. The paper proposes two main causal factors of political leverage (voice): It hypothesizes that voice depends on IDPs' proximity to urban centers and on the concrete channels and means they employ to interact with policymakers, with "modern" channels and means expected to outperform more "traditional" approaches. The paper finds that only one group can directly influence policies that concern them, and that in this case the proximity to loci of political and economic decision-making is clearly advantageous. However, the other three cases demonstrate that location appears to be more of an enabling yet insufficient factor. Furthermore, mere reliance on externally modernized governance structures does not necessarily increase IDPs' voice, and greater political leverage seems to depend ultimately on how versatile their representatives are in terms of engaging with both governmental and societal institutions around specific issues and well-defined demands. Nonetheless, the thrust of national policies to "reruralize" urbanized IDPs appears ambivalent, and strategies that support national policy cohesion while simultaneously amplifying marginalized groups' voice and strengthening accountability in local governance structures should therefore be of significant concern to International Non-governmental Organizations (INGOs) working in a post-war context.
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spelling mit-1721.1/976222019-04-12T12:41:34Z Determinants of IDP Voice--Four Cases from Sierra Leone and Afghanistan Esser, Daniel Using an interview-based case study methodology, this paper investigates how four groups of internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Afghanistan and Sierra Leone engage in existing frameworks of local governance with the aim of influencing political processes. In accordance with IDPs' priorities to ensure individual and communal recovery and the (re)creation of sustainable livelihoods, security of land tenure and employment creation receive particular attention. The paper proposes two main causal factors of political leverage (voice): It hypothesizes that voice depends on IDPs' proximity to urban centers and on the concrete channels and means they employ to interact with policymakers, with "modern" channels and means expected to outperform more "traditional" approaches. The paper finds that only one group can directly influence policies that concern them, and that in this case the proximity to loci of political and economic decision-making is clearly advantageous. However, the other three cases demonstrate that location appears to be more of an enabling yet insufficient factor. Furthermore, mere reliance on externally modernized governance structures does not necessarily increase IDPs' voice, and greater political leverage seems to depend ultimately on how versatile their representatives are in terms of engaging with both governmental and societal institutions around specific issues and well-defined demands. Nonetheless, the thrust of national policies to "reruralize" urbanized IDPs appears ambivalent, and strategies that support national policy cohesion while simultaneously amplifying marginalized groups' voice and strengthening accountability in local governance structures should therefore be of significant concern to International Non-governmental Organizations (INGOs) working in a post-war context. 2015-07-01T18:07:19Z 2015-07-01T18:07:19Z 2005-08 Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/97622 en_US Rosemarie Rogers Working Paper Series;31 application/pdf Inter-University Committee on International Migration
spellingShingle Esser, Daniel
Determinants of IDP Voice--Four Cases from Sierra Leone and Afghanistan
title Determinants of IDP Voice--Four Cases from Sierra Leone and Afghanistan
title_full Determinants of IDP Voice--Four Cases from Sierra Leone and Afghanistan
title_fullStr Determinants of IDP Voice--Four Cases from Sierra Leone and Afghanistan
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of IDP Voice--Four Cases from Sierra Leone and Afghanistan
title_short Determinants of IDP Voice--Four Cases from Sierra Leone and Afghanistan
title_sort determinants of idp voice four cases from sierra leone and afghanistan
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/97622
work_keys_str_mv AT esserdaniel determinantsofidpvoicefourcasesfromsierraleoneandafghanistan