Conflict, Parenting, and Early Childhood Mental Health in Conflict-affected Settings: Evidence from Colombia

67 Pages Posted: 5 Oct 2022

See all articles by Juliana Sánchez-Ariza

Juliana Sánchez-Ariza

Universidad de los Andes, Colombia - Department of Economics

Jorge Cuartas Ricaurte

Universidad de los Andes, School of Government

Andres Moya

Universidad de los Andes, Colombia

Date Written: September 22, 2022

Abstract

We examine the effect of the exposure (or reduction in the exposure) to conflictrelated violence on parental mental health, caregivers' parenting stress and responsive caregiving, and early childhood mental health. We use data collected from the impact evaluation of a psychosocial group intervention in Tumaco, Colombia, a community chronically affected by the armed conflict. Using an Instrumental Variables approach, we use the program's randomization into cohorts and staggered design of the data collection to exploit a natural experiment in which the armed groups in the municipality agreed to a Truce and municipal violence rates dropped between data collections. We find that the exposure to recent conflict-related violence had negative effects across the four main dimensions: increased parental mental health problems in 0.68 sd (SE=0.342 ; q-value=0.074), increased parenting stress in 0.76 sd (SE=0.389 ; q-value=0.074), reduced responsive caregiving in -1.023 sd (SE=0.434 ; q-value=0.074) and increased child mental health problems in 0.556 sd (SE=0.343 ; q-value=0.074). By providing causal evidence on the direct effect of conflict-related violence on parenting outcomes, we conduct an exploratory mediation analysis to assess whether parental mental health, parenting stress and responsive caregiving behaviors may partially account for the association between violence and child mental health. Yet, correlational links between violence and parental mental health and parenting behavior outcomes as mediators suggest important associations for understanding children's mental health vulnerability in conflict settings.

Note:
Funding Information: Saving Brains partnership, United Way Colombia, Fundacion Exito, Fundacion FEMSA, Genesis Foundation, Fundacion Coca-Cola, Primero lo Primero, and the Facultad de Economıa at Universidad de los Andes.

Conflict of Interests: None.

Keywords: Early childhood mental health, parental mental health, violence, parenting, conflict, early childhood development, responsive caregiving.

JEL Classification: I1, I3, J13, D91

Suggested Citation

Sánchez-Ariza, Juliana and Cuartas Ricaurte, Jorge and Moya, Andres, Conflict, Parenting, and Early Childhood Mental Health in Conflict-affected Settings: Evidence from Colombia (September 22, 2022). Documento CEDE No. 34, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4230362 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4230362

Juliana Sánchez-Ariza (Contact Author)

Universidad de los Andes, Colombia - Department of Economics ( email )

Carrera 1a No. 18A-10
Santafe de Bogota, AA4976
Colombia

Jorge Cuartas Ricaurte

Universidad de los Andes, School of Government ( email )

Carrera Primera # 18A-12
Bogota, DC D.C. 110311
Colombia

Andres Moya

Universidad de los Andes, Colombia ( email )

Carrera Primera # 18A-12
Bogota, D.C. 110311
Colombia
5713394949 (Phone)
13394949 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://economia.uniandes.edu.co/moya

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