Past Event

Conference: Reimagining social protection in a time of global uncertainty

From 12 Sep 2023 9:00 until 14 Sep 2023 13:00

In this Centre for Social Protection international conference we will discuss and debate the past, present and future roles of social protection as a development policy agenda, at a time of global uncertainty and multiple crises. Themes include social protection policy processes, social protection in protracted crises, and how social protection can be more inclusive and innovative.

In just two decades since the early 2000s, social protection established itself as a vibrant social policy sector in countries across the Global South, from Latin America to sub-Saharan Africa to South Asia. Social protection appeared in several Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in 2015. Even the poorest countries now have a National Social Protection Policy. More recently, social protection provided an invaluable set of instruments deployed by governments worldwide in national responses to Covid-19. However, the global context today is very different to two decades ago and is characterised by a range of emerging and intensifying uncertainties and challenges.

Dimensions of uncertainty include: the war in Ukraine, its implications for global food and energy security and the associated cost of living crisis; post-Covid-19 recovery and efforts to get back on track towards achieving the SDG targets by 2030; the intensifying climate crisis and too slow transitions to green economies; and the increasing number and duration of protracted crises, acute conflicts, displacement, refugees, and economic migration.

Moreover, questions remain about the extent to which social protection is fully institutionalised and embedded, especially in low-income countries where the initial impetus and funding was provided by international development partners. This concern is reflected in persistent underfunding by governments in the Global South of social protection programmes: under-coverage, inadequate benefits, and few claims-based entitlements.

What will remain when financial and technical assistance from development agencies is withdrawn? Related to this, the rise of right-of-centre populist governments, economic shocks associated with Covid-19 and the Ukraine war, and austerity budgets in the Global North could all reduce official development assistance to the Global South, which in turn could affect spending on social protection. All these uncertainties are relevant to how to think about social protection for the future: will social protection follow the ‘high road’ of further expansion and growth, or the ‘low road’ of stagnation and cutbacks? Importantly, they also present opportunities.

A defining function of social protection is to protect vulnerable people against risks and shocks, and new technologies and common modalities and platforms are facilitating a convergence between social protection and humanitarian relief, as was amply demonstrated during the Covid-19 pandemic. What is the role of social protection in this shifting and uncertain global context? This conference will offer a forum for researchers and critical thinkers to discuss and debate the past, present and future of social protection policy and provision, especially but not only in the Global South.

About the conference

This will be a face-to-face conference taking place over two and a half days at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) in Brighton, UK.

It is hosted by the Centre for Social Protection.  We have invited academic and policy-oriented proposals for presentation of (i) full papers, (ii) poster or (iii) outputs using other formats (e.g. digital or arts-based), to be prepared ahead of the conference, under the following themes:

  • Politics of social protection policy processes
  • Social protection in acute and protracted crisis settings
  • Inclusive social protection
  • Programme and system innovation in contexts of uncertainty

Please note that this conference is invite only.

Chairs

  • Stephen Devereux, IDS Research Fellow
  • Jeremy Lind, IDS Research Fellow
  • Keetie Roelen, Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Global Development (CSGD) in the Faculty of Wellbeing, Education and Language Studies (WELS) at the Open University, UK.
  • Rachel Sabates-Wheeler, IDS Research Fellow

Contact

For more information on this conference email: [email protected]

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