WORKING PAPER

From Childhood Abduction to Adulthood: Enduring Consequences for Women in Uganda

by
Alessandra Cassar
,
,
Miranda Lambert
,
Christine Mbabaze Mpyangu
and
Danila Serra
December 17, 2025

Recommended

Girls carrying water in rural Uganda
Blog Post

From Childhood Abduction to Adulthood

Alessandra Cassar et al.
December 17, 2025

Girls and women are disproportionately exposed to forced displacement and physical and sexual violence during armed conflicts. Between the mid-1980s and the mid-2000s, the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) abducted over 50,000 people in Northern Uganda, including more than 25,000 children. We study approximately 550 women in Northern Uganda, half of whom were abducted before or during adolescence. Leveraging the plausibly exogenous nature of LRA abductions and combining incentivized behavioral games with detailed survey data, we assess the long-term effects of childhood abduction on a range of socioeconomic and mental health outcomes, as well as on behavioral traits and preferences. Childhood abduction significantly reduces educational attainment but has little persistent effect on economic activity, marriage outcomes, or risk tolerance. In contrast, nearly two decades after the conflict ended, formerly abducted women still exhibit substantially higher rates of depressive symptoms and perceived stress, heightened stress responses, reduced social support and prosociality, and greater grit. These findings highlight the need for post-conflict interventions that prioritize long-term mental health and social reintegration, alongside standard investments in education and livelihoods.

CITATION

Cassar, Alessandra, Eeshani Kandpal, Miranda Lambert, Christine Mbabaze Mpyangu, and Danila Serra. 2025. From Childhood Abduction to Adulthood: Enduring Consequences for Women in Uganda. Center for Global Development.

DISCLAIMER & PERMISSIONS

CGD's publications reflect the views of the authors, drawing on prior research and experience in their areas of expertise. CGD is a nonpartisan, independent organization and does not take institutional positions. You may use and disseminate CGD's publications under these conditions.


Thumbnail image by: Arne Hoel / The World Bank