Journal Article

IDS Bulletin Vol. 46 Nos. 2

Confidence, Capacity Building and Cash: Achieving Sustained Impact for Ultra-poor Women

Published on 15 March 2015

Understanding poverty and how to measure and eradicate it has evolved over the last 20 years to incorporate a multidimensional focus.

The experience of Women for Women International (WfWI), a US-based non-profit organisation that works with women survivors of war in eight countries, shows that while economic inputs are crucial for moving above the US$1.25/day poverty line, a more holistic approach is needed for ultra-poor women in conflict-affected situations to achieve this goal. This article analyses WfWI’s 12-month social protection training and cash transfer programme for ultra-poor labour-constrained women in Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. The programme helps women obtain skills and resources to graduate from poverty and promote overall wellbeing for their families and communities. We first provide background on social protection programmes in conflict settings, then outline data collection methodology and the WfWI core programme, and lastly, we discuss our findings and opportunities for further analysis.

Related Content

This article comes from the IDS Bulletin 46.2 (2015) Confidence, Capacity Building and Cash: Achieving Sustained Impact for Ultra-poor Women

Cite this publication

McIlvaine, K., Oser, C., Lindsey, J. and Blume, M. (2015) Confidence, Capacity Building and Cash: Achieving Sustained Impact for Ultra?poor Women. IDS Bulletin 46(2): 83-92

Authors

Kassie McIlvaine
Corey Oser
Julianna Lindsey
Maia Blume

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
doi
10.1111/1759-5436.12131

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