Refine
H-BRS Bibliography
- yes (177)
Departments, institutes and facilities
- Fachbereich Sozialpolitik und Soziale Sicherung (177) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (177) (remove)
Year of publication
Keywords
- Qualitätssicherung (5)
- Rehabilitation (5)
- Africa (4)
- Katamnese (4)
- Qualitätsmanagement (4)
- social protection (4)
- Kenya (3)
- Outcomeforschung (3)
- Patient-Reported Outcomes (PRO) (3)
- Return to Work (2)
- Social Protection (2)
- Sozialversicherungsbeiträge (2)
- Zambia (2)
- cash transfers (2)
- follow-up (2)
- international labour standards (2)
- labour migration (2)
- political economy (2)
- skill partnership (2)
- social assistance (2)
- sustainability (2)
- vocational training (2)
- Abhängigkeitserkrankungen (1)
- Allgemeines Gleichbehandlungsgesetz (1)
- Altersdiskriminierung (1)
- Arbeitsgericht (1)
- Arbeitsunfall (1)
- Ausbilder (1)
- Automotive (1)
- Begutachtung (1)
- Berufskrankheiten (1)
- Betrieb (1)
- Binary and count models (1)
- COVID (1)
- COVID-19 (1)
- Case Management (1)
- Circulus vitiosus (1)
- Comparative institutional analysis (1)
- Consumer protection (1)
- Deutschland (1)
- Diagnostic work-up (1)
- Diagnostik (1)
- Digitalisierung (1)
- Emergency room management (1)
- Evaluation (1)
- Flood resilience (1)
- Floods (1)
- Flüchtlingshilfe (1)
- Folien (1)
- Gender-based violence (1)
- Gesetzliche Unfallversicherung (1)
- Gesundheit Studierender (1)
- Gesundheitskompetenz (1)
- Gesundheitswesen (1)
- Ghana (1)
- Gläubiger (1)
- Health care consumption (1)
- Health insurance (1)
- Health literacy (1)
- Healthcare (1)
- ICF (1)
- Inclusive development (1)
- Inclusive growth (1)
- Individualisierung (1)
- Insolvenzrecht (1)
- Institutional change (1)
- International Labour Organization (1)
- Kausalitätsprüfung (1)
- Kommunalverwaltung (1)
- Kooperation (1)
- Kundenbefragung (1)
- Körpersprache (1)
- LEAP (1)
- Lecture (1)
- Lernen (1)
- Lohnfortzahlung (1)
- Medizinische Rehabilitation (1)
- Menschenrecht (1)
- Mobile health (1)
- Modelling (1)
- Moldova (1)
- Multislice CT (1)
- Muskelverletzung (1)
- Netzwerkbildung (1)
- Nichtregierungsorganisationen (1)
- Organisationssoziologie (1)
- Outcome (1)
- Outcome-Forschung (1)
- PHC (1)
- Pakistan (1)
- Pathophysiologie (1)
- Patient Reported Outcomes (1)
- Patient Reported Outcomes (PRO) (1)
- Polytrauma (1)
- Powerpoint (1)
- Prevention forum (1)
- Program effectiveness (1)
- Program evaluation (1)
- Projektbeschreibung (1)
- Propensity score (1)
- Protection motivation theory (1)
- Präsentation (1)
- Präventionsforum (1)
- Quality management (1)
- Qualitätsnetzwerke (1)
- Qualitätsorientierte Steuerung (1)
- Qualitätssteuerung (1)
- Redetechnik (1)
- Reha vor Rente (1)
- Reha-Management (1)
- Rehabilitandenbefragung (1)
- Rehabilitations-Statistik-Datenbank (RSD) (1)
- Rehabilitations-Statistik-Datenbasis (RSD) (1)
- Rehabilitationsmanagement (1)
- Return to Work (RTW) (1)
- Rhabdomyolyse (1)
- Risk factors (1)
- Routinedaten (1)
- Rural women (1)
- Schockraummanagement (1)
- Schutzstandards (1)
- Schwerverletzte (1)
- Sekundärdatenanalyse (1)
- Sexual violence (1)
- Simulation (1)
- Social cash transfers (1)
- Solidaritätsprinzip (1)
- Soziale Integration (1)
- Sozialversicherung (1)
- Spiral-CT (1)
- Strategie (1)
- Student health (1)
- Studium (1)
- Targeting (1)
- Theorie-Praxis (1)
- Therapie (1)
- Therapiekonzept (1)
- Trump (1)
- Uganda (1)
- Uncertainty (1)
- Unfallversicherung (1)
- Universal health care (1)
- Unterkünfte für geflüchtete Menschen (1)
- Verbund (1)
- Vietnam (1)
- Vocational re-training (1)
- Voneinander-Lernen (1)
- Vortrag (1)
- Wegeunfall (1)
- Wirksamkeit (1)
- Zivilgesellschaft (1)
- altersgerechte Degeneration (1)
- altersgerechte Texturstörung (1)
- biodegradable pins (1)
- biodegradation (1)
- body language (1)
- braking (1)
- calcium phosphate (1)
- civil society (1)
- climate adaptation (1)
- climate change (1)
- community-based targeting (1)
- composite (1)
- consumption expenditure (1)
- coverage (1)
- crisis response (1)
- developing countries (1)
- driver assistance system (1)
- driver interface (1)
- drivers (1)
- expenditure patterns (1)
- family benefits (1)
- field experiment (1)
- gesetzliche Unfallversicherung (1)
- girl marriages (1)
- global social policy (1)
- globalisation (1)
- illusion (1)
- impact (1)
- industrial relations (1)
- informal institutions (1)
- learning from each other (1)
- local administration (1)
- local context (1)
- low-income country (1)
- non-governmental organisations (1)
- nudging (1)
- odds-weighted regression (1)
- organisational sociology (1)
- outcome research (1)
- outcomes research (1)
- patient reported outcomes (PRO) (1)
- pensions (1)
- politics (1)
- polylactic acid (1)
- powerpoint (1)
- presentation (1)
- propensity score matching (1)
- protection standards (1)
- public speaking techniques (1)
- quality assurance (1)
- quality networks (1)
- racing (1)
- refugee accommodation (1)
- rehabilitation-statistical-database (RSD) (1)
- remittances (1)
- return to work (RTW) (1)
- routine data (1)
- science (1)
- secondary data analysis (1)
- self-evidence (1)
- self-tracking (1)
- slides (1)
- social business (1)
- social enterprise (1)
- social expenditure (1)
- social protection (1)
- social security (1)
- social security contributions (1)
- success factors (1)
- targeting preferences (1)
- tripartism (1)
- triple win (1)
- vehicle dynamics (1)
Farming communities confronted with climate change adopt formal and informal adaptation strategies to mitigate the effects of climate change. While the environmental and social effects of climate change are well documented, there is still a dearth of literature on girl-child marriage (formal marriage or informal union between a child under the age of 18 and an adult or another child) as a response to the effects of climate change. In this research, we ask if girl-child marriage is promoted as a social protection mechanism first, rather than as simply a response to climate-induced poverty. We use qualitative semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions to explore this question in a rural farming community in Northern Ghana. Our findings reveal that climate change shocks result in poverty and compel farmers to marry off their young daughters. The unmarried girl-child is perceived as an ‘extra mouth to feed’, a liability whose marriage becomes a strategy for protecting the family, the family’s reputation, and the girl child. The emphasis in girl-child marriage is not on the girl-child as an individual but on the family as a group. Hence, what is good for the family is assumed to be in the best interest of the girl-child. We place our analysis at the intersection of climate change, social protection, and the incidence of girl-child marriages. We argue that understanding this link is crucial and can contribute significantly to our knowledge of girl-child marriage as well as our ability to address this in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Blickpunkt
(2024)