The dynamics of household dissolution and change in socio-economic position: A survival model in a rural South Africa
The dynamics of household dissolution and change in socio-economic position: A survival model in a rural South Africa
This paper investigates household dissolution and changes in asset wealth (socio-economic position) in a rural South African community containing settled refugees. Survival analysis applied to a longitudinal dataset indicated that the covariates increasing the risk of forced household dissolution were a reduction in socio-economic position (asset wealth), adult deaths and the permanent outmigration of more than 40% of the household. Conversely, the risk of dissolution was reduced by bigger households, state grants and older household heads. Significant spatial clusters of former refugee villages also showed a higher risk of dissolution after 20?years of permanent residence. A discussion of the dynamics of dissolution showed how an outflow/inflow of household assets (socio-economic position) was precipitated by each of the selected covariates. The paper shows how an understanding of the dynamics of forced household dissolution, combined with the use of geo-spatial mapping, can inform inter-disciplinary policy in a rural community.
CITATION: Sartorius, K.. The dynamics of household dissolution and change in socio-economic position: A survival model in a rural South Africa . : Taylor & Francis Group , 2014. Development Southern Africa, Vol. 31, No. 6, November 2014, pp. 775-795 - Available at: https://library.au.int/dynamics-household-dissolution-and-change-socio-economic-position-survival-model-rural-south-afric-5