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DO I NEED THIS TOOLKIT?
WHAT DO I NEED TO KNOW?
ØCore definitions
ØThe situation
ØRationale
ØSocial risk management and OVC
WHAT DO I NEED TO DO?
WHAT'S SPECIAL ABOUT MY SECTOR?
 
Recommended Reading:

The social risk management web-site

PowerPoint presentation on OVC and child vulnerability

World Bank Social Risk Management - Publications

 


  Social Risk Management (SRM) and OVC

 

The SRM Approach and Children

The World Bank framework for analyzing social protection issues is the social risk management (SRM) approach (more on SRM: The Social Risk Management Website). A central part of the SRM framework focuses on household and community mechanisms for managing risk. A low-cost and often more sustainable way to protect children from (increased) vulnerability is to take a look at traditional household risk management mechanisms and consider how these can be improved or supplemented to prevent the worst outcomes from occurring in the first place or to deal adequately with them once they have occurred. The types of instruments available to households will shape the way in which they manage social risks, which, in turn, will affect the vulnerability of their children.

Households and communities in all cultures have their traditional ways to manage social risks and shocks. Most commonly, they will concentrate on coping with shocks once they have occurred (e.g., borrowing money to pay for medical care or sending children to work to make up for lost income), but solidarity networks, as a way to be prepared when the crisis strikes, are also common (e.g., funeral societies). The shocks that hit households can be idiosyncratic (striking an individual family household), or covariant (striking the community collectively). The impact of negative shocks that strike only a household or a family (like illness or unemployment) can often be curbed by support from the local community or the extended family through some sort of a mutuality arrangement. However, when a whole community is struck (as in the case of natural disasters), local mutual support systems may become ineffective because almost everyone will need help at the same time.

An analysis of the most common risks in a given country or region, and of the main ways in which they are addressed, can be useful for targeting purposes (which type of household is most vulnerable? Which type of OVC?) and for identifying specific interventions to reduce the vulnerability of households in general and of children in particular. In principle, this should be done through a full-fledged Risks and Vulnerability Assessment, but shortcuts are an option.

The attached worksheets can prove helpful for an initial analysis of the risks facing OVC:

 


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