Reintegrating Women Victims Back to the Society
It is crucial to make sure that integration measures are based on human rights standards and take into account how the regional conflict has affected women as the region transitions from relief to rehabilitation.
Reintegration is typically viewed as a multifaceted process that enables people to re-establish the economic, social, and psychosocial ties they require to sustain their life, livelihood, and dignity as well as to become fully integrated members of society.
Processes in Reintegration
The reintegration process includes the recovery of (women victims) then subsequently returning them to society, their medical treatment, reintroduction to their families and friends, and provides decompression time while also conserving any intelligence they may have been able to gather to aid in the prosecution of these criminal organizations.
Finding and addressing returnee vulnerabilities is a top priority because doing so can lower risk, prevent further harm to returnees, and provide an opportunity for offering support. The case management approach relies on developing an open and trusting relationship with returnees and empowering them to drive their own reintegration process and work through the challenges they are facing.
Last but not least, developing a strategy for reintegration is a cooperative effort. Knowing these from the start of the reintegration process aids in personalized individual assistance that leads to sustained reintegration. This should always provide returnees a realistic assessment of the aid that is available and assist them in making plans for when assistance may expire.
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