Blackwell Alexandra H, Agengo Yvonne, Ozoukou Daniel, Wendt Julia Ulrike, Nigane Alice, Goana Paradis, Kanani Bertin, Falb Kathryn
Airbel Impact Lab, International Rescue Committee, Washington, DC, United States of America.
Department of Social Policy & Intervention, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2023 May 24;3(5):e0001265. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0001265. eCollection 2023.
Globally, armed conflicts have increased threefold since 2010. The number of children voluntarily engaging with armed groups is also rising, despite increasing efforts to prevent this grave human rights violation. However, traditional approaches focusing on the prevention, release, and reintegration of children through forced recruitment do not adequately address the complex and interlinking push and pull factors of voluntary recruitment. This qualitative study sought to deepen understanding of the drivers and consequences of voluntary recruitment from the perspectives of adolescents and their caregivers, as well as to explore how to better support families living in conflict settings. In-depth interviews were conducted with 74 adolescents (44 boys and 30 girls) ages 14 to 20 years and 39 caregivers (18 men and 21 women) ages 32 to 66 years in two distinct conflict settings: North Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo and Ouham-Pendé, Central African Republic. Interviews with adolescents utilized a visual narrative technique. The findings examine the unique perspectives of adolescents engaged with armed groups and their caregivers to understand how conflict experiences, economic insecurity, and social insecurity influence adolescent's engagement with armed groups and reintegration with their families. The study found that families living in conflict settings are subject to traumatic experiences and economic hardship that erode protective family relationships, leaving adolescent boys and girls particularly vulnerable to the systemic and overlapping factors that influence them to engage with and return to armed groups. The findings illustrate how these factors can disrupt protective social structures, and inversely how familial support can act as a potential protective factor against recruitment and break the cycle of reengagement. By better understanding the experiences of adolescents enduring recruitment and how to support caregivers of those adolescents, more comprehensive programming models can be developed to adequately prevent voluntary recruitment and promote successful reintegration, enabling children to reach their full potential.
从全球范围来看,自2010年以来,武装冲突增加了两倍。尽管为防止这一严重侵犯人权行为付出了更多努力,但自愿加入武装组织的儿童数量仍在上升。然而,传统方法侧重于通过强迫招募来预防、解救儿童并使其重新融入社会,却未能充分应对自愿招募中复杂且相互关联的推拉因素。这项定性研究旨在从青少年及其照顾者的角度,加深对自愿招募的驱动因素和后果的理解,并探索如何更好地支持生活在冲突环境中的家庭。在刚果民主共和国北基伍省和中非共和国瓦姆-彭代省这两个不同的冲突地区,对74名年龄在14至20岁的青少年(44名男孩和30名女孩)以及39名年龄在32至66岁的照顾者(18名男性和21名女性)进行了深入访谈。对青少年的访谈采用了视觉叙事技巧。研究结果审视了加入武装组织的青少年及其照顾者的独特观点,以了解冲突经历、经济不安全和社会不安全如何影响青少年加入武装组织以及与家人重新团聚。研究发现,生活在冲突环境中的家庭遭受创伤经历和经济困难,这侵蚀了具有保护作用的家庭关系,使青少年男孩和女孩特别容易受到那些促使他们加入并重返武装组织的系统性和重叠性因素的影响。研究结果说明了这些因素如何能够破坏具有保护作用的社会结构,反之,家庭支持如何能够成为防止招募的潜在保护因素,并打破重新加入的循环。通过更好地了解经历招募的青少年的情况以及如何支持这些青少年的照顾者,可以制定更全面的方案模式,以充分防止自愿招募并促进成功重新融入社会,使儿童能够充分发挥其潜力。