Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Programming" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Examining the Acceptability and Effectiveness of a Self-Directed, Web-Based Resource for Stress and Coping in University: Randomized Controlled Trial Böke BN; Mettler J; Bastien L; Cho S; Heath N; 41576346
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Optimizing Mixtures of Metal-Organic Frameworks for Robust and Bespoke Passive Atmospheric Water Harvesting Harriman C; Ke Q; Vlugt TJH; Howarth AJ; Simon CM; 41427123
CHEMBIOCHEM
3 A Deep Learning-Based Ensemble System for Brent and WTI Crude Oil Price Analysis and Prediction Zhang Y; Lahmiri S; 41294965
JMSB
4 A game theoretic approach to contract-based enviro-economic coordination of wood pellet supply chains for bioenergy production Vazifeh Z; Mafakheri F; An C; Bensebaa F; 38037615
ENCS
5 Designing a multi-objective closed-loop supply chain: a two-stage stochastic programming, method applied to the garment industry in Montréal, Canada Shafiee Roudbari E; Fatemi Ghomi SMT; Eicker U; 36747987
ENCS
6 Disrupted Lessons in Engineering Robotics: Pivoting Knowledge Transfer From Physical to Virtual Learning Environments Chichekian T; Trudeau J; Jawhar T; 35702710
PHYSICS
7 Immunoinflammatory processes: Overlapping mechanisms between obesity and eating disorders? Breton E; Fotso Soh J; Booij L; 35594735
PSYCHOLOGY
8 A flexible robust model for blood supply chain network design problem Khalilpourazari S; Hashemi Doulabi H; 35474752
ENCS
9 War and reintegration for girls and young women in northern Uganda: A scoping review Savard M; Michaelsen S; 34479000
EDUCATION

 

Title:War and reintegration for girls and young women in northern Uganda: A scoping review
Authors:Savard MMichaelsen S
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34479000/
DOI:10.1016/j.chiabu.2021.105269
Publication:Child abuse & neglect
Keywords:Feminist theoryReintegration programmingScoping reviewUgandaYoung mothers
PMID:34479000 Category: Date Added:2021-09-04
Dept Affiliation: EDUCATION
1 Department of Education, Concordia University, 1455 de Maisonneuve West, Montréal, Québec H3G 1M8, Canada. Electronic address: michelle.savard@concordia.ca.
2 School of Public Health, Université de Montreal, C. P. 6205, succursale Centre-ville, Montréal, Québec H3C 3T5, Canada.

Description:

Background: During the civil war in northern Uganda (1986-2006), thousands of girls were abducted into rebel and government forces. Most of the females who were not abducted lived in abhorrent conditions in camps for internally displaced people (IDP). As the war was drawing to a close, reintegration programs emerged and some continue today.

Objective: Using a feminist lens, we conducted a scoping review to examine the literature written about these girls and young women. The impetus for this research was to determine the breadth of literature available; compare how this population is represented in the academic, practitioner and popular literature and to analyse how this representation may be impacting reintegration programming.

Methods: Key words were entered into 14 academic databases, search engines and practitioner websites. Articles were included if they covered the recruitment, retention, return, and/or reintegration of formerly abducted and/or war-affected girls and women and if they were published between 2005 and 2019. A total of 112 articles were categorized and coded according to topics, themes and theoretical approaches.

Results: Based on the findings of this scoping review, it appears that many articles describe formerly abducted and war-affected young women from a deficit-based perspective, while relatively fewer articles are written with a strength-based, resiliency-focused lens.

Conclusion: Based on our analysis, we argue for a more nuanced representation of women formerly engaged with armed groups, and argue for a gendered, inclusive approach to reintegration programming.





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