When a woman becomes the head of a household, is she more vulnerable—or is the system failing her?
In this Refugee Archive Roundtable webinar, host Ruth Adeyeye speaks with Azwar Surahman (PhD Candidate, Gadjah Mada University) and Kristi Dawn Riggs (Doctoral Candidate, Georgetown University) to unpack a decade of global research on female-headed household vulnerability.
Drawing from 94 studies across multiple regions, this conversation challenges common assumptions. Vulnerability is not just about income—it is shaped by structural inequality, access to resources, and how institutions define and respond to women’s lives.
From displacement to rural isolation, from financial exclusion to climate shocks, the discussion reveals how layered and interconnected these realities are.
What You’ll Learn
* What “female-headed household” actually means across contexts
* Why vulnerability goes beyond poverty and income
* How structural inequalities shape women’s access to resources
* The limits of data and why lived experiences are often missing
* What governments, NGOs, and communities can do differently
Key Insight
Female-headed households are not inherently vulnerable.Vulnerability emerges from systems that fail to support them.
Why This Matters
As the number of female-headed households grows globally—due to conflict, migration, and economic change—how we define and measure vulnerability directly impacts who receives support.
This conversation asks a deeper question:Are we measuring women’s realities—or simplifying them?
This webinar is part of the Refugee Archive Roundtable, a live series bringing together scholars whose research helps us better understand issues affecting female-headed households and displaced single mothers worldwide.
Get full access to The Refugee Archive: Global Center for Displaced FHH at therefugeearchive.substack.com/subscribe