Nepal,
with a population of 27.6 million people,
is a 'least developed country'
in many ways. The country is characterised
by significant socioeconomic insecurity,
comprising structurally generated income
poverty, a politically and socially fragile
post-conflict situation, threats to the
environment, and deeply entrenched forms
of social exclusion. At the same time,
it is a country characterised by interesting
socio-political policy innovations, triggered
by the end of a ten-year violent conflict.
Building on a discussion of the country's
challenges, the paper explores the policy
responses in the domain of social protection
devised by the interim government to address
the various dimensions of insecurity,
and to show their novelty as well as their
limitations. The final section offers
some ideas on policy areas which would
be needed to improve socioeconomic security.
January
03, 2012.
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