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Assignment on Relief Aid Dependency Syndromes A Case for Disaster-Prone Moroto District in Uganda for microeconomics. An Essential Study resource just for YOU!!












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Relief Aid Dependency Syndromes: A Case for Disaster-Prone Moroto
District in Uganda

Chapter 1: Introduction to the Study

Introduction

The topic for this study is about the effect of continuous provision of relief aid to

disaster-affected people over an extended period of time. Such action is believed by many

critics in the humanitarian domain and other host governments to significantly contribute

to creation of a condition known as dependency syndrome (Harvey & Lind, 2009). This is

a situation whereby the relief aid beneficiaries are believed to lose their initiative to fend

for themselves in order to improve their livelihoods, other than relying on relief handouts.

Findings from past qualitative studies such as by Harvey & Lind, (2009); Siyoum et al.

(2012); etc. were not exhaustively conclusive about the relationship between the relief aid

and dependency syndrome. Their method of study was based on proxy indicators, as the

means of measuring the effects of long-term provision of aid on beneficiaries. However,

the current literatures based on economic models such as the one developed by Nicola

Limodio (2011) emphasized the need to conduct an empirical study to corroborate or

dispute the earlier findings based on proxy indicators. This controversy is negatively

weighing on the humanitarian agencies and other host governments to conclude on the

impacts of long-term distribution of relief aid to the people in disasterprone areas. I have

therefore conducted this study to ascertain whether dependency syndrome is a myth or

reality.

, 2
This study was conducted in the disaster-prone area of Moroto District of

Karamoja region in northeastern Uganda. Moroto District is a place where people had

continuously been receiving relief aid for many years due to high frequencies of disasters

in the area. The district was then the only place in Uganda with the highest number of

humanitarian agencies in the country (MFPED 2013).

The potential positive social implications for this study are that it will contribute

to the formulation of policy that would help streamline humanitarian interventions in

chronic disaster-prone situations. That is, aid must not be given indefinitely to the

disaster-affected people; there must be some ways of empowering these people to

eventually withstand the effect of subsequent disasters on their own.

In this chapter, I briefly discussed background information about dependency

syndrome, based on a summary of past literature, after which, I presented the problem

statement. The chapter briefly stated the purpose of the study and the research questions

and hypothesis. The chapter also provided a detailed description of the theoretical and

conceptual framework upon which this study was grounded. This chapter included

discussion of the theory that formed the basis of the research as well as the null and

alternative hypothesis. Further details of theoretical foundation and conceptual

frameworks are discussed in Chapter 2. The chapter provided definition of some key

terms conceptually used in this study and presented the assumptions, scope, delimitations,

and limitations of this study. Finally, the significance of this study and its implication for

positive social change are discussed. This chapter then concluded by summarizing the

whole chapter and setting the stage for the next chapter.

, 3



Purpose of the Study

This study employed a comprehensive convergent mixed qualitative and

quantitative research approach that would holistically investigate the impacts of

prolonged provision of relief aid in disaster-prone areas. The study qualitatively explored

the beneficiaries‟ lived experiences about the roles of relief aid in their livelihoods as

well as their perceptions about dependency syndrome. The quantitative component of the

study examined the effect of relief aid on the beneficiaries‟ behaviors and how it could

lead to a dependency mentality, such as a change in labor/productivity pattern, savings,

investment, and consumption pattern. The purpose of all these was to establish the truth

about the notion of dependency syndrome in relation to the continuous provisioning of

relief aid over a prolonged period of time, and further to recommend better ways of

administering relief assistant to people living in chronic disaster areas. Mixed research

method was chosen to provide a holistic approach to the study, which would be capable

of providing the missing information about the notion of dependency syndrome in the

study, according to the identified gap in literature. This study explored the beneficiaries‟

perceptions about relief aid based on their lived experience, and these was compared with

and integrated with the empirical findings about the impact of prolonged provision on

relief aid on behaviors that could lead to dependency mentality such as decreased

productivity pattern, reduced savings, investments, and household consumption pattern.

The independent variable in this study was long-term provision of relief aid, while the

dependent variables were activities that signify progress towards dependency mentality,

, 4
such as reduction in household productivity level, savings, and investment and

consumption pattern. The covariates in this study were age, sex, and household size.

Regression analysis was conducted to establish the correlation and the relationship among

these variables.

Background

Relief aid in the past decades was the main means of saving lives of

disasteraffected people in many places around the world, but eventually it became more

prominent in disaster-prone areas of Africa, Asia and the Caribbean (Bronwen & Josiah,

2013). However, due to increased frequencies of disasters in many parts of the world,

many relief agencies decided to stay indefinitely in disaster-prone areas and continued

providing relief aid year after year, for over a decade (Bronwen & Josiah, 2013). Some

host governments and other critics began to raise concerns about the perceived negative

consequences of such relief aid distributions, and these kind of concerns later gave birth

to the notion of dependency syndrome (Harvey & Lind, 2009).

In response to the above concerns, many humanitarian agencies resorted to

commissioning studies to establish the effects of long-term and repeated relief aid

distribution on the beneficiaries in relation to dependency syndrome. For example in

2005, Oxfam GB commissioned a study for that purpose; the study was conducted by

Over Sea Development Institute in Kenya and Ethiopia (Harvey & Lind, 2009). The

survey concluded that dependency syndromes are not a direct negative result of the

distribution of relief aid, rather the way the relief aid is administered. In response to the

complaints by the government of Ethiopia about food aid as the main cause of

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