Working Paper

BASIC Research Working Paper 37

Can Social Protection Programmes Promote Livelihoods and Climate ‍Resilience in Conflict‑Affected Settings? Evidence from Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programme

Published on 7 May 2025

The paper discusses the growing interest in using social protection to address climate-related vulnerabilities and strengthen resilience, particularly in conflict-affected settings. It examines the Productive Safety Net Programme in Ethiopia, highlighting that while social assistance offers a protective function, it falls short of reducing long-term vulnerabilities, especially in settings characterised by multidimensional and enduring stressors and shocks. The assistance provided is often inadequate, leaving recipients to rely on their own resources. The paper emphasises that improving livelihoods is possible with additional resources, consistent funding to fulfil programme functions, integration with complementary sectors and effective public services, alongside measures to ensure peace and stability.

Cite this publication

Lind, J.; Holland-Szyp, C.; Sabates-Wheeler, R.; Teshome, Y. and Naess, L. O. (2025) Can Social Protection Programmes Promote Livelihoods and Climate Resilience in Conflict-Affected Settings? Evidence from Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programme, BASIC Research Working Paper 37, Brighton: Institute of Development Studies, DOI: 10.19088/BASIC.2025.006

Authors

Jeremy Lind

Professorial Fellow

Rachel Sabates-Wheeler

Research Fellow

Lars Otto Naess

Research Fellow

Publication details

doi
10.19088/BASIC.2025.006
language
English

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About this publication

Region
Ethiopia

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