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SOCIAL INSECURITY (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   169363


Absence of Political Security in Ethiopian and Its Consequences on State Security / Chekol, Yayew Genet   Journal Article
Chekol, Yayew Genet Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The main purpose of this article is to examine the absence of political security and its consequences on state security of Ethiopia. The study was conducted through case study design and used qualitative research approach, and key informant interview was held. The main finding of the article is that in Ethiopia there is a prevalence of political insecurity which is committed by government officials via security sectors and which has led to the existence of mistrust on security sectors, the expansion of mob justice and the existences of social insecurity in the state.
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2
ID:   126106


Migration, reconfigurations of family relations and social (in): an introduction / Locke, Catherine; Seeley, Janet; Rao, Nitya   Journal Article
Seeley, Janet Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract This introduction reviews the contributions this collection of articles makes to understanding migration, social reproduction and social protection. Migration necessarily involves reconfigurations of family relations and these entail changes in the patterning of social (in)security. Our expansive interpretation of the concepts of social reproduction and social protection situate the reorganisation of gendered family lives as integral to the migration-development nexus. Life-course thinking informs analysis of how migrants 'do family' and what this means for gender, identity and (in)security. The collection explores how 'care deficits' are managed, both discursively through the negotiation of gendered ideologies about gender identity and the family, and through the everyday practice of social reproduction. The resulting reorganisation of social security involves taking on new risks and vulnerabilities for migrants and their families. For both internal and international migrants the challenges involved in securing social reproduction are powerfully shaped by welfare and migratory regimes and raise important questions about the relationship between social protection and broader social policy and citizenship issues.
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