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Original Article

War-related experiences of former child soldiers in northern Uganda: comparison with non-recruited youths

, , &
Pages 281-291
Received 06 Jun 2013
Accepted 31 Jul 2013
Published online: 03 Dec 2013
 

Abstract

Background:

Armed conflict imposes huge hardship on young people living in war zones. This study assessed former child soldiers’ experience and perception of stress in common war events during the armed conflict in northern Uganda and compares it with their non-recruited counterparts.

Aim:

To investigate whether child soldiers experienced more severe exposure to war events, and explore how war might affect youths differently, depending on the co-occurrence of these events.

Methods:

The study was undertaken in four northern Ugandan districts in 22 secondary schools with a sample size of 981 youths, about half of whom had been child soldiers. The participants completed a questionnaire on socio-demographic characteristics and stressful war events which was analyzed using descriptive statistics, a probabilistic index and correlation network analysis.

Results:

Former child soldiers had significantly greater experience of war events than their non-recruited counterparts. The violence of war is more central in their experience and perception of stress, whereas the scarcity of resources and poor living conditions are most central for non-recruited participants. The extent to which a war event, such as separation from the family, is perceived as stressful depends on the experience and perception of other stressful war events, such as confrontation with war violence for former child soldiers and life in an Internally Displaced Persons’ camp for non-recruited participants.

Conclusion:

The network approach permitted demonstration of the many ways in which war-affected youths encounter and appraise stressful war events. War events might function as moderators or mediators of the effect that other war events exert on the lives and well-being of young people living in war zones. This demands comprehensive and individualized assessment.

Acknowledgments

The study was financed by the Peacebuilding Service of the Belgian Federal Public Service for Foreign Affairs, Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation. The authors wish to acknowledge the invaluable help of the Ugandan research assistants, school principals and teachers, and are grateful to all the youths who participated in this study.

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