Nearby armed conflict affects girls' education in Africa.

Female education is a crucial input to women's agency and empowerment, and has wide-ranging impacts, from improved labor market outcomes to reducing child mortality. Existing gender-specific evidence on the effect of armed conflict on education is conflict-specific and mixed. We link granular d...

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Main Author: Xiao Hui Tai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0314106
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author Xiao Hui Tai
author_facet Xiao Hui Tai
author_sort Xiao Hui Tai
collection DOAJ
description Female education is a crucial input to women's agency and empowerment, and has wide-ranging impacts, from improved labor market outcomes to reducing child mortality. Existing gender-specific evidence on the effect of armed conflict on education is conflict-specific and mixed. We link granular data on conflict events to georeferenced survey data on educational attainment from 28 countries in Africa, and use a regression-based approach to estimate the local effect of conflict exposure on female years of schooling. We find that conflict events occurring within 25 kilometers during a female child's primary school years reduces years of schooling by 0.4 years by adolescence. We do not find the same effect for males. Exposure to only low intensity conflict events with at most two casualties has persistent negative and significant effects. Consecutive years of conflict, however, can have positive effects in later years, which offset earlier negative effects, suggesting a habituation to violence. In the past two decades, we estimate excess child mortality in Africa associated with the indirect channel of women's education to be similar in magnitude to the number of direct child casualties due to conflict.
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spelling doaj-art-f3e549696afd4d4198c3dbc3e9c981042025-02-05T05:31:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01201e031410610.1371/journal.pone.0314106Nearby armed conflict affects girls' education in Africa.Xiao Hui TaiFemale education is a crucial input to women's agency and empowerment, and has wide-ranging impacts, from improved labor market outcomes to reducing child mortality. Existing gender-specific evidence on the effect of armed conflict on education is conflict-specific and mixed. We link granular data on conflict events to georeferenced survey data on educational attainment from 28 countries in Africa, and use a regression-based approach to estimate the local effect of conflict exposure on female years of schooling. We find that conflict events occurring within 25 kilometers during a female child's primary school years reduces years of schooling by 0.4 years by adolescence. We do not find the same effect for males. Exposure to only low intensity conflict events with at most two casualties has persistent negative and significant effects. Consecutive years of conflict, however, can have positive effects in later years, which offset earlier negative effects, suggesting a habituation to violence. In the past two decades, we estimate excess child mortality in Africa associated with the indirect channel of women's education to be similar in magnitude to the number of direct child casualties due to conflict.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0314106
spellingShingle Xiao Hui Tai
Nearby armed conflict affects girls' education in Africa.
PLoS ONE
title Nearby armed conflict affects girls' education in Africa.
title_full Nearby armed conflict affects girls' education in Africa.
title_fullStr Nearby armed conflict affects girls' education in Africa.
title_full_unstemmed Nearby armed conflict affects girls' education in Africa.
title_short Nearby armed conflict affects girls' education in Africa.
title_sort nearby armed conflict affects girls education in africa
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0314106
work_keys_str_mv AT xiaohuitai nearbyarmedconflictaffectsgirlseducationinafrica