The impacts of armed conflict on human development: A review of the literature

B-Tier
Journal: World Development
Year: 2025
Volume: 187
Issue: C

Authors (19)

Vesco, Paola (not in RePEc) Baliki, Ghassan (not in RePEc) Brück, Tilman (International Security) Döring, Stefan (not in RePEc) Eriksson, Anneli (not in RePEc) Fjelde, Hanne (not in RePEc) Guha-Sapir, Debarati (not in RePEc) Hall, Jonathan (not in RePEc) Knutsen, Carl Henrik (not in RePEc) Leis, Maxine R. (not in RePEc) Mueller, Hannes (Barcelona School of Economics ...) Rauh, Christopher (University of Cambridge) Rudolfsen, Ida (not in RePEc) Swain, Ashok (not in RePEc) Timlick, Alexa (not in RePEc) Vassiliou, Phaidon T.B. (not in RePEc) von Schreeb, Johan (not in RePEc) von Uexkull, Nina (not in RePEc) Hegre, Håvard (not in RePEc)

Score contribution per author:

0.106 = (α=2.01 / 19 authors) × 1.0x B-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

The detrimental impacts of wars on human development are well documented across research domains, from public health to micro-economics. However, these impacts are studied in compartmentalized silos, which limits a comprehensive understanding of the consequences of conflicts, hampering our ability to effectively sustain human development. This article takes a first step in addressing this gap by reviewing the literature on conflict impacts through the lens of an inter-disciplinary theoretical framework. We review the literature on the consequences of conflicts across 9 dimensions of human development: health, schooling, livelihood and income, growth and investments, political institutions, migration and displacement, socio-psychological wellbeing and capital, water access, and food security. The study focuses on both direct and indirect impacts of violence, reviews the existing evidence on how impacts on different dimensions of societal wellbeing and development may intertwine, and suggests plausible mechanisms to explain how these connections materialize. This exercise leads to the identification of critical research gaps and reveals that systematic empirical testing of how the impacts of war spread across sectors is severely lacking. By streamlining the literature on the impacts of war across multiple domains, this review represents a first step to build a common language that can overcome disciplinary silos and achieve a deeper understanding of how the effects of war reverberate across society. This multidisciplinary understanding of conflict impacts may eventually help to reconcile divergent estimates and enable forward-looking policies that minimize the costs of war.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:eee:wdevel:v:187:y:2025:i:c:s0305750x24002766
Journal Field
Development
Author Count
19
Added to Database
2026-01-24