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The Plight of At-Risk Women in Chechnya

Women’s Rights and Social Change in Chechnya (May 5, 2008)

After more than a decade of intense conflict, the destruction of social services, pervasive unemployment, increasing drug and alcohol abuse, and the advent of radicalized religious sentiment, the situation for women in Chechnya is grave. The state is unable—and in some cases, unwilling—to provide necessary support to at-risk women.

Nongovernmental organizations aiming to improve the plight of at-risk women in regions as blighted as Chechnya must be prepared to provide an array of services, including psychological, social, legal, and financial support. How does a nongovernmental organization with such a broad and important mandate function with limited resources and in the face of political resistance?

Open Society hosted a talk on women’s rights and social change in Chechnya with Gistam Sakaeva, program officer at the Grozny-based women’s NGO Reliance and a 2008 Voices of Courage honoree of the Women’s Commission for Refugee Women and Children.

Listen above.

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