Conflict and Resilience: A Synthesis of Feinstein International Center Work on Building Resilience and Protecting Livelihoods in Conflict-Related Crises

Author(s)
Maxwell, D. et al.
Publication language
English
Pages
42pp
Date published
01 Dec 2017
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Conflict, violence & peace, Disaster preparedness, resilience and risk reduction, Livelihoods
Organisations
Tufts University

Resilience is defined as the ability of people to mitigate, weather, and “bounce back” from shocks or adversity. This definition is framed in terms of understanding capacities and risk—often particularly climactic, environmental, and economic risk. However, understanding the resilience of people and their livelihoods to the kinds of shocks and stresses associated with violent conflict requires a different set of analyses. This paper reviews more fifteen years of research by the Feinstein International Center to examine the nexus of conflict, livelihoods, and resilience. Its key findings are as follows:

  • Conflict directly undermines livelihoods and resilience
  • Conflict affects civilian livelihoods through displacement
  • Conflict is not the only factor undermining the resilience of crisis-affected households
  • Social networks affect resilience in the face of conflict
  • Post-conflict dynamics can also limit livelihoods recovery
  • Investing in livelihoods cannot alone stabilize conflict-affected societies