PROJECT ABSTRACT
An estimated 200 million people will be forced to migrate over the next 10 years to make way for development
projects including hydropower dams, mines, and urban infrastructure, with potentially hazardous implications for
their long-term health and well-being. Development-induced displacement and resettlement (DIDR)
disproportionately affects vulnerable populations in low- and middle-income countries, and frequently results in
poverty, unemployment, and the loss of social capital. While research suggests that DIDR may be linked with
poor health, the effects of displacement on those must vulnerable—women and children—are largely unknown.
This project uses a novel longitudinal study design to uncover the complex dynamics between DIDR and women
and children’s health and well-being. We will focus on households displaced due to the Belo Monte Dam, which
was recently completed in the Brazilian Amazon and is the fourth largest hydropower dam in the world. The
majority of those displaced were urban households who lived in the city of Altamira. We will track and conduct
in-depth interviews with a sample of displaced and non-displaced mothers in Altamira who were originally
surveyed in 2010/2011. By linking follow-up in-depth interview data to baseline household survey data, we will
identify how women and children experienced and responded to DIDR, uncover who is most vulnerable, and
explore the mechanisms underlying observed relationships between DIDR and well-being. The specific aims are
(1) Develop a unique longitudinal dataset that combines survey and interview data for use in qualitative analyses.
Select an interview sample of 90 mothers of children under age 18, stratified by displacement status (resettled
in a new neighborhood, compensated with cash, and not displaced) and educational attainment; (2) Investigate
the ways that women and children experience and respond to DIDR over time, focusing on (1) children’s well-
being (education, health); and (2) maternal, infant, and reproductive health (antenatal care, birth outcomes,
breastfeeding behavior, access to family planning); and (3) Identify the mechanisms underlying observed
relationships between DIDR and women and children’s health and well-being. The proposed project will lay the
foundation for an R01 application to collect longitudinal quantitative data from a representative sample of
households who will be displaced by the Bem Querer Dam, planned for construction later this decade in the
Brazilian Amazon, as well as from a control group of households who will not be displaced. Insights from the
proposed research as well as the future R01 project will inform policies and interventions to facilitate more
equitable future resettlement.