We only use your email address to send you the newsletter and to see how many people are opening our emails. A full privacy policy can be viewed here. You can change your mind at any time and update your preferences or unsubscribe.

An adolescent girl who is blind in Amhara, Ethiopia © Nathalie Bertrams/GAGE 2020

Experiences of vulnerable urban youth under covid-19: the case of youth with disabilities

11.08.20 | Ethiopia

COVID-19 | Disability | Health, Nutrition and Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH)

Authors

Guday Emirie, Abreham Iyasu, Kiya Gezahegne, Nicola Jones, Elizabeth Presler-Marshall, Kassahun Tilahun, Fitsum Workneh and Workneh Yadete

Ethiopia declared the first case of coronavirus on the 13 March 2020, and while numbers of confirmed cases initially remained low, by late July 2020 the number of confirmed cases had exceeded 15,000, with over 200 deaths.Across the globe, countries are reporting multidimensional health, economic and social effects of covid-19 and the ensuing policy responses to contain the disease. The situation is expected to be potentially more challenging in low-income countries like Ethiopia where there is a weak health system, compounded by recurrent political unrest. The outbreak of covid-19 is expected to put women, girls, young people and socially vulnerable groups, including persons with disabilities, at heightened risk, given that containment measures to slow the pandemic including lockdowns and disruption of basic services are already being seen to exacerbate existing economic and social inequalities. Indeed, persons with disabilities are more likely to experience adverse socio-economic outcomes than persons without disabilities due to ‘less education, poorer health outcomes, lower levels of employment and higher poverty rates’. Rapid virtual research by GAGE has highlighted the challenges that young people are facing in rural communities in Afar, Amhara and Oromia, and in Dire Dawa city, but as yet very little is known about the specific experiences of vulnerable urban youth. This brief focuses on youth (aged 15–24 years) with physical and visual disabilities, and is part of a series exploring the impacts of covid-19 and the ensuing government policy response on vulnerable urban youth in Ethiopia.

Suggested citation

Emirie, G., Iyasu, A., Gezahegne, K., Jones, N., Presler-Marshall, E., Tilahun, K., Workneh, F. and Yadete, W. (2020) ‘Experiences of vulnerable urban youth under covid-19: the case of youth with disabilities.’ Policy brief. London: Gender and Adolescence: Global Evidence. (https://www.gage.odi.org/publication/experiences-of-vulnerable-urban-youth-under-covid-19-the-case-of-youth-with-disabilities/)


Related publications

Reports
29.03.24
Resourcing girl- and youth-led sexual and reproductive health rights activism: Potential and challenges
Health, Nutrition and Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH)
Cross-country
Read more
29.03.24 | Health, Nutrition and Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) | Reports | Cross-country
Resourcing girl- and youth-led sexual and reproductive health rights activism: Potential and challenges
Read more
Toolkits and survey instruments
29.03.24
Qualitative research toolkit on adolescent gender norm change and empowerment programming
Education and learning
Ethiopia
Read more
29.03.24 | Education and learning | Toolkits and survey instruments | Ethiopia
Qualitative research toolkit on adolescent gender norm change and empowerment programming
Read more
Reports
13.03.24
Resourcing girls: The potential and challenges of girl- and youth-led organising
Cross-country
Read more
13.03.24 | Reports | Cross-country
Resourcing girls: The potential and challenges of girl- and youth-led organising
Read more