Paper
Beyond Economic Benefits: The Contribution to Microfinance to Post-conflict Recovery in Asia and the Pacific
Can microfinance promote social mobilization, empowerment, stabilization and peace building?
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14 pages
This paper describes the intangible benefits of microfinance, including:
- Looking at social mobilization, empowerment, stabilization, peace-building and solidarity, through social capital enhancement;
- Reviewing literature and draws lessons from conflicts in nine countries in Asia and the Pacific;
- Emphasizing microfinance experiments in Afghanistan, Papua New Guinea, Sri Lanka and Timor Leste.
The paper demonstrates that microfinance:
- Promotes conflict resolution, for example by empowering members to start their own organizations;
- Encourages domestic procedures that help people surmount conflict;
- Provides a way to bring people together, focusing on economic activities and cooperation rather than differences.
The paper states that when microfinance is provided to different ethnic groups, microfinance:
- Contributes to social and political reconciliation;
- Provides a forum for a unified voice for peace, with people cooperating and working towards a shared future;
- Encourages re-integration of refugees and demobilized soldiers by providing finance to mixed groups linked by joint liability.
The paper concludes that microfinance is also a tool to empower people by restablishing their trust and confidence in each other.
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