ISSUE 51 July 2011
Humanitarian Exchange Magazine
Supporting women in a difficult security environment: the ICRC's programmes for women-headed households in Iraq
© DVIDSHUB (via flickr)
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) delegation in Iraq created a ‘Women and War’ advisor position in 2008, responsible for assessing and integrating women’s needs into ICRC programmes. Although no confirmed figures exist, there are estimates of over a million women-headed households (WHHs) in Iraq. Despite limitations on access imposed by insecurity, it was possible to meet Iraqi women from all walks of life in Jordan and in more secure areas in Iraq, to discuss the problems affecting them. Based on these initial consultations and working with contacts provided by local NGOs, the ICRC organised a field survey in partnership with an Iraqi NGO in Baghdad. Although the survey was limited in scope (30 structured questionnaires in one neighbourhood), the results confirmed the serious difficulties WHHs were facing.[1]
Women’s specific needs
Iraq is a patriarchal society, which can make life difficult for women without a man. A woman is expected to take care of her family inside the home, while her husband earns a living and upholds his family reputation. A woman without a husband lacks economic, physical and social protection. She often has little or no professional experience, and faces a job market where opportunities are scarce and more favourable to men. Her close family often cannot help, as they are themselves in dire economic circumstances. She is without a regular income and struggles to pay for rent, food, clothing, medicine and education for her children. She depends on a network of charity but cannot cope with daily expenses. As a result she cuts down on essential spending, like health or education, and many send their young sons out to work. The survey also highlighted two additional points: women are overwhelmingly willing to work, especially in home-based activities, and only a tiny number have access to social support from the state, despite being entitled to it.
[1] ICRC, Situation of Women Headed Households in Bagdad, 2008.
Featured in this issue
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Humanitarian action in the Middle East
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The humanitarian challenge in the Middle East
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Restricting aid: access and movement constraints in the Occupied Palestinian Territories
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Supporting women in a difficult security environment: the ICRC's programmes for women-headed households in Iraq
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Iraqi refugees: making the urban refugee approach context-specific
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Working with local organisations in Jordan
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Addressing mental health needs in Lebanon
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MSF in the Middle East: a challenging context
Practice & Policy Notes
- What cash transfers tell us about the international humanitarian community
- Local NGOs in Myanmar: vibrant but vulnerable
- Christian faith communities and HIV in humanitarian settings: the cases of South Sudan, DRC and Kenya
- Developing interagency DRR tools at field level: World Vision’s experience in Bolivia
- A market-integrated response to an emergency in Kyrgyzstan
- Ending isolation: solar solutions in Haiti
- Integrating conflict mitigation into the INEE Minimum Standards for Education
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