hidden
Image Database Export Citations

Menu:

Collective Action and Vulnerability: Burial Societies in Rural Ethiopia

Show full item record

Type: Working Paper
Author: Dercon, Stefan; Hoddinott, John; Krishnan, Pramila; Woldehannna, Tassew
Date: 2008
Agency: CGIAR System-wide Program on Property Rights and Collective Action, International Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, DC
Series: CAPRi Working Paper, no. 83
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/4239
Sector: Social Organization
Region: Africa
Subject(s): collective action
indigenous institutions
poverty alleviation
networks
Abstract: "Collective action can help individuals, groups, and communities achieve common goals, thus contributing to poverty reduction. Drawing on longitudinal household and qualitative community data, the authors examine the impact of shocks on household living standards, study the correlates of participation in groups and formal and informal networks, and discuss the relationship of networks with access to other forms of capital. In this context, they assess how one form of collective action, iddir, or burial societies, help households attenuate the impact of illness. They find that iddir effectively deal with problems of asymmetric information by restricting membership geographically, imposing a membership fee, and conducting checks on how the funds were spent. The study also finds that while iddir help poor households cope with individual health shocks, but shows that the better-off households belong to more groups and have larger networks. In addition, where households have limited ability to develop spatial networks, collective action has limited ability to respond to covariate shocks. Therefore, realism is needed in terms of the ability of collective action to respond to shocks, and direct public action is more appropriate to deal with common shocks."

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
capriwp83.pdf 246.0Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following document type(s)

Show full item record