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1 mon in SSA, especially in regions exposed to armed conflict.
2 the global mortality burden associated with armed conflict.
3 h and humanitarian agencies in situations of armed conflict.
4 ciples and practice of medical neutrality in armed conflict.
5 relationship between climate variability and armed conflict.
6 cure areas of their own country) annually by armed conflict.
7 overnance for the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
8 sily treated or prevented, urbanization, and armed conflict.
9 Syria during the first 8 years of the Syrian armed conflict.
10 ns in a high-poverty population experiencing armed conflict.
11 local conflict actor strength ratios for any armed conflict.
12 egative outcomes, e.g., by fueling crime and armed conflict.
13 h local economic activity, and prevalence of armed conflict.
14 d leaders during election cycles or times of armed conflict.
15 ond what would be expected in the absence of armed conflict.
16 luding both victims and ex-combatants of the armed conflict.
17 ntial morbidity and mortality as a result of armed conflicts.
18 ed alternative attitudes towards the risk of armed conflicts.
19 soldiers compared with civilian children in armed conflicts.
20 duction to the causes and characteristics of armed conflicts.
21 er hundreds of years, largely as a result of armed conflicts.
22 sed risk of death from nearby high-intensity armed conflicts.
23 mage to the built environment resulting from armed conflicts.
24 al interventions for mitigating the harms of armed conflicts.
25 ostic intervention in individuals exposed to armed conflicts.
26 current implementation challenges to modern armed conflicts.
27 eeds to understand the characteristics of an armed conflict and be prepared with resources and capabi
28 inimal essential set of information in large armed conflict and natural disaster crises since 2010: w
33 Eastern regions of Ukraine, long affected by armed conflict, and large population centers in Poland.
35 ine the extent to which children living near armed conflicts are at increased risk of becoming orphan
39 has focused on the mortality associated with armed conflict as the primary measure of the population
40 as having occurred in the absence of active armed conflict between Janjaweed/GoS forces and rebel gr
42 ilities and emblems have become a feature of armed conflict despite their prohibition by the laws of
43 erstand the magnitude of and manner in which armed conflicts directly and indirectly undermine child
47 cant decline in birth weight associated with armed conflict, emphasizing the need for targeted interv
48 iological materials for hostile purposes and armed conflict, entered into force in 1975 and now has t
52 ere, and overwhelming health consequences of armed conflict, food scarcity, mass displacement, and po
53 ee global sources of human rights reports in armed conflicts for 2003-08, and in-depth reports on vio
56 t change to prevent economic instability and armed conflict from forcing surgery down the global heal
64 are affected by anxiety and depression after armed conflict in low-income and middle-income countries
69 ranium (DU) ammunition were used in previous armed conflicts in Iraq, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Ser
70 f the ongoing US-led war on terror and civil armed conflicts in the Arab world are much more than the
71 mperature suggests a roughly 54% increase in armed conflict incidence by 2030, or an additional 393,0
72 arch provides fragmentary evidence about how armed conflict indirectly affects the survival chances o
75 using GPS tracks and conflict data from the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data (ACLED) project(7
76 re merged with data from the high-resolution Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project to constr
80 gaps in literature on the harmful effects of armed conflict on non-combatants and highlights the need
81 The profound repercussions of the prolonged armed conflict on patients with lung cancer in Syria nec
82 to violence) and indirect health effects of armed conflict on women and children (including adolesce
85 e number of individuals that have died in an armed conflict, or to disambiguate individual authors us
86 vidence for other countries beset by chronic armed conflicts, our results suggest that the fledgling
87 , we find a coincidence rate of 9% regarding armed-conflict outbreak and disaster occurrence such as
88 climate-related disaster occurrence enhances armed-conflict outbreak risk in ethnically fractionalize
89 is, we test this hypothesis based on data on armed-conflict outbreaks and climate-related natural dis
90 attention in settings where challenges like armed conflict, poverty and internal displacement have p
91 been challenged by the COVID-19 pandemic and armed conflicts, resulting in a decline in the global Hu
92 presented from regions more involved in the armed conflicts showed poorer survival rates with odds r
93 study of Colombia's spatiotemporally dynamic armed conflict suggests that municipal exposure to armed
95 -related disasters act as direct triggers of armed conflicts, the disruptive nature of these events s
97 diversity is on the line on many fronts-from armed conflict to pandemics to climate change-defending
99 conflict suggests that municipal exposure to armed conflict was associated with excess child and infa
100 Data on location, timing, and intensity of armed conflicts were obtained from the Uppsala Conflict
101 n trade, as well as population mixing during armed conflicts, were likely drivers for the cross-conti
102 But political instability and protracted armed conflict, with significant disruption of the healt
105 men and children living dangerously close to armed conflict (within 50 km) increased from 185 million
106 ng additional areas to offset the impacts of armed conflicts would not only increase the return on in