·
Gnanaseelan,
J. (2010, March 18). Relating the impacts of the War on the economic and human
security issues of the farmers of Northern Sri Lanka in addressing Prevention
of recurrence, reaching for prosperity after the War. Proceedings of the Abstracts, the 12th International
Conference on Sri Lanka Studies (ICSLS), Colombo. the Royal Asiatic Society of
Sri Lanka and the Open University of Sri Lanka, p.38
"Relating the impacts of the War on the economic and human security issues of the farmers of Northern Sri Lanka in addressing Prevention of recurrence, reaching for prosperity after the War”*
Jeyaseelan Gnanaseelan**
Farmers’ problems and survival strategies in a conflict
situation have been rarely touched in Sri Lankan studies in the past except
some small surveys for institutional interventions by both international and
local NGOs. Even in international literature so much importance has been given
to the details of the impacts of the conflicts and of the conflicts themselves
not relating the war experience to “addressing prevention
of recurrence, reaching for prosperity after the War”. This study
provides an overall picture of the livelihood and vulnerability of farming
communities in the Northern part of Sri Lanka with regard to key human
security aspects.
The objectives of this research lend themselves to both
qualitative and quantitative methodologies, which covered the two village sites
selected in the Vavuniya district of Sri Lanka: namely, Poovarasankulam controlled
by the government, and Kovil-kunjukkulam, controlled by the militants, affected
intensively from the 1990s till 2003/4. A variety of research tools were
employed during data collection including focus group discussions, historical
profiles, key informant interviews, and household surveys.
The findings
reveal that their human security should cover the impacts of the War such as
all the menaces that threaten human survival, daily life, and dignity of the
farmers. Their
survival strategies could be possible within the means and operations available
in their villages regarding living and earning conditions or in the conflict
zones where lot of restrictions were imposed; locally available simple raw
materials were the inputs for livelihood and survival. The strategies depended
mainly on the institutional interventions and approval of the military and
militants. The findings can be related to addressing their problems in
the future institutional interventions after the War and help to respond to the
most critical needs of those low potential agricultural communities.
Key words: human
security, economic security, war, survival, post-war revival
*Paper
to be presented to
The 12th International Conference on Sri Lanka Studies (ICSLS)
to be held from the 18th to 20th March 2010 in Colombo
** Dr. Jeyaseelan Gnanaseelan is a Lecturer of Vavuniya Campus, University of Jaffna , Park Road , Vavuniya , Sri Lanka . He is an “Accredited Teacher in Higher Education”
awarded by The SEDA, United
Kingdom . Apart from his doctorate in Media
Discourse in English, he holds an Msc in Human Security. He has been as a
Consultant to the Oxfam GB sponsored surveys on rural development projects in
Vavuniya, a conflict affected region. Phone: 0717477503; Email:
jeya86@hotmail.com.
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