A Way Out? Apprenticeship Training, Employment and Social Transformation in Northern Nigeria

Last registered on August 02, 2019

Pre-Trial

Trial Information

General Information

Title
A Way Out? Apprenticeship Training, Employment and Social Transformation in Northern Nigeria
RCT ID
AEARCTR-0004500
Initial registration date
July 31, 2019

Initial registration date is when the trial was registered.

It corresponds to when the registration was submitted to the Registry to be reviewed for publication.

First published
August 02, 2019, 3:33 PM EDT

First published corresponds to when the trial was first made public on the Registry after being reviewed.

Locations

Primary Investigator

Affiliation
Duke University

Other Primary Investigator(s)

PI Affiliation
The World Bank Group
PI Affiliation
University of Chicago
PI Affiliation
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Additional Trial Information

Status
On going
Start date
2016-12-01
End date
2020-07-31
Secondary IDs
Abstract
Can improving labor market opportunities for marginalized youth alter their social and economic trajectories? We examine this question in the context of Northern Nigeria, a region with a long history of religious tension and violence along Christian-Muslim lines. Using a RCT, we study whether providing skills training to impoverished youth, who largely lack access to formal education and attend Islamic religious schools, can improve their engagement in income generating activities and reduce their participation in religious and political violence. We also examine whether training can promote gender empowerment, both among trained girls as well as their caretakers. The skills training is delivered through “Mafita”, a DfiD-funded initiative implemented by Adam Smith International (ASI). The training we examine in the impact evaluation described here takes the form of an apprenticeship, which provides on the job training in which youth train directly with skilled master craftsmen. The study involves 5,165 subjects and spans a two-year period, with endline data collected over the November 2018-May 2019 period. This document specifies the analysis plan for examining the effects of this training initiative, delineating the econometric specifications and outcomes we plan to examine, which, among others include: employment, income, female empowerment, female confidence, participation in religious and political violence, religious extremism, social networks, and subjective wellbeing.
External Link(s)

Registration Citation

Citation
Crost, Benjamin et al. 2019. "A Way Out? Apprenticeship Training, Employment and Social Transformation in Northern Nigeria." AEA RCT Registry. August 02. https://doi.org/10.1257/rct.4500-1.0
Former Citation
Crost, Benjamin et al. 2019. "A Way Out? Apprenticeship Training, Employment and Social Transformation in Northern Nigeria." AEA RCT Registry. August 02. https://www.socialscienceregistry.org/trials/4500/history/51106
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Experimental Details

Interventions

Intervention(s)
This study evaluate the impact of an apprenticeship intervention delivered by the Mafita program to over 3,000 young men and women. The program is unique in targeting highly marginalized individuals, including many Almajirai. The intervention first delivered 6 months of foundational training in basic literacy, numeracy, project funding, working in teams, and managing relationships. It then linked participants to Master Craft Persons (MCPs) with whom they completed 6-9 months of apprenticeship.
Intervention Start Date
2017-01-01
Intervention End Date
2018-03-31

Primary Outcomes

Primary Outcomes (end points)
Primary outcomes
1. Income generating activities (in past 30 days)
a. Worked in wage employment (t3>0)
b. Worked self-employed (u3>0)
c. Hours worked in wage employment (t4)
d. Hours worked in self-employment (u4)
e. Total income from wage employment (t12)
f. Total profits from self-employment (u9a)

2. Participation in political and religious violence. For our main analysis of this outcome, we will use responses from a self-completed audio module. We will also do a confirmatory analysis using responses to the same questions elicited in a list experiment (see Section 4.5 for details).
a. Used force or violence for a political cause (r13)
b. Participated in a group that sought to administer justice to someone for behaving badly/immorally (r12)
c. Used force or violence for reasons related to your religion (r9)
d. Participated in any riot, protest or demonstration that turned violent (r10)

3. Attitudes toward religious adherence and religious enforcement
a. Believes it’s important that government ensures people follow religious laws (e6)
b. Vignettes on enforcing violations of religious rules. (For calculation of the index, the outcome will be defined as choosing either “report to authorities” or “beat up” as the answer. In additional analysis, we will also report effects of treatment on the probability of choosing each individual answer.)
i. Willing to punish alcohol consumption (e91)
ii. Willing to punish miniskirt wearing (e101)
iii. Willing to punish blasphemy (e111)

4. Female empowerment
a. Desired/actual age of marriage / fertility (bc2, b2c, b2d, y32)
b. Experienced domestic violence (o21-o215)
c. In a marriage, who do you think should have the greater say in each of the following decisions (outcome defined as probability that decision is taken by wife or both partners equally) (y1-y10)
d. Who decides how income will be used in household (y11)
e. Would like daughters to work outside the home (y12)
f. Various questions on women’s role in society (y14-y21)
g. OK for a husband to beat his wife under various circumstances (y22-y28)
h. OK for a wife to have her own opinion, even if it is different from her husband’s (y29)
i. Would like to be working in 5 years’ time (ha1)
j. Confidence in ability to solve Raven’s matrices (B11)

5. Caregiver female empowerment. In the primary hypothesis we will examine the sample of caregivers who have female wards. Treatment will be defined based on whether the caregiver has any female ward enrolled in Mafita. We will also conduct heterogeneity analysis with boys, to determine if the response of caregivers is significantly different for caregivers who have male wards enrolled in Mafita (as compared to those who have female wards enrolled in the program).
a. Ok for unmarried and married women of ages 14, 18 and 22 to be earning an income inside home and outside home (b2a-e)
b. Age at which women should get married (b3_1); Age at which women should have their first child (b3_3)
c. Various questions on what women should be allowed to do in society and what boys and girls should have to do and have prioritized toward them (b5_1 – b5_8)
d. Various questions on equality in household decision making (b6_1-b6_10)

6. Anti-social behavior. For our main analysis of this outcome, we will use responses from a self-completed audio module. We will also do a confirmatory analysis using responses to the same questions elicited in a list experiment (see Section 4.5 for details).
a. Used tramadol in past 3 months (r2)
b. Used kayan maye in past 3 months (r1)
c. Stolen objects or money from someone, when that person was not present (r5)
d. Stolen objects or money from someone, when that person was present (r6)
e. Gotten into a fight where I tried to physically hurt someone (r3)
f. Did some work for a criminal group (d’an ta’adda) in the past 6 months (r14)

7. Generosity toward other religions: donation experiment. See section 4.4 for details.

Primary Outcomes (explanation)
For the directly measured outcomes (all outcomes except 7) we will combine all survey responses related to an outcome into a mean effects index, following Kling et al. (2007). To do this, we will first express responses in terms of standard deviations from the control group mean. We will then sum all standardized responses related to an outcome into an index switching signs if necessary to ensure that the positive direction always indicates a “better” outcome. We will also report a robustness test using the method of Anderson (2008), which weights the index items by their inverse covariance matrix. We will also present estimates of individual indicators within each family to better gauge how various indicators contribute to overall effects within families.

Secondary Outcomes

Secondary Outcomes (end points)
8. Attitudes towards political violence
a. Use of violence is justified in protesting an injustice (I3)
b. It is good to use violence to resolve problems (I5)
c. It is ok to use force or violence for political cause (I6)

9. Religious social network (for the purpose of this outcome, a respondent’s social network is defined as the five people he/she spends the most time with)
a. Number of people from other religion in social network (e22)
b. Trusts people from other religions (e45)
c. Trusts leaders from other religions (e57)

10. Religiosity
a. Time spent on religious activities (c22c)
b. Importance of religion in respondent’s life (e35)
c. Other things are more important than religion (r16)
d. Often has a strong sense of God’s presence (h211)

11. Subjective well-being
a. Cantril’s Ladder (h11)
b. MHI-5 (mhi1-mhi5)

12. Self-esteem
a. 7 item index (h212, h31-h39)

13. Skills
a. Literacy assessment (Ia1-Ia5)
b. Numeracy assessment (na1-na7)

14. Assets and consumption
a. 12-item module (Q1-Q7, Q11-Q12)
b. Money spent on various categories (d22a-d22c, d22f-d22k)
15. Job search behavior
a. In the past 6 months, did you actively look for a job? (v1)
b. How many months out of the past 6 months did you actively look for a job (v2)
c. In the past 30 days, did you actively look for a job? (v3)
d. How many days out of the past 30 days did you actively look for a job? (v4)
e. In the past 7 days, did you actively look for a job? (v5)
f. How many days of the past 7 days did you spend actively looking for a job? (v6)
g. In the past 6 months, did you try to start your own business (v7)?
h. In the past 30 days, did you try to start your own business (v8)?

16. Range of social networks (for the purpose of this outcome, a respondent’s social network is defined as the five people he/she spends the most time with)
a. Number of people in social network who are currently employed (e24)
b. Number of people in social network who live in same neighborhood as respondent (e26)
Secondary Outcomes (explanation)
For the directly measured outcomes (all outcomes except 7) we will combine all survey responses related to an outcome into a mean effects index, following Kling et al. (2007). To do this, we will first express responses in terms of standard deviations from the control group mean. We will then sum all standardized responses related to an outcome into an index switching signs if necessary to ensure that the positive direction always indicates a “better” outcome. We will also report a robustness test using the method of Anderson (2008), which weights the index items by their inverse covariance matrix. We will also present estimates of individual indicators within each family to better gauge how various indicators contribute to overall effects within families.

Experimental Design

Experimental Design
The study is a randomized control trial that targets a pool of 5,165 individuals, 3,066 of whom were randomly assigned into the treatment group while the remaining 2,099 were assigned to the control group.
Experimental Design Details
See pre-analysis plan attached.
Randomization Method
Randomization was done electronically in office by a computer using Stata.

Applicants were randomly assigned into a treatment group that received training starting in April 2017 and a control group that was excluded from training. The pool of applicants comprised 5,165 individuals, 3,066 of whom were randomly assigned into the treatment group while the remaining 2,099 were assigned to the control group.
The Mafita program asked to make sure that at least 40% of the treated individuals would be women, at least 20% would be Almajirai (Quranic school boys), and at least 20% would be Islamic Quranic Education (IQE) girls. To ensure this, as well as geographic balance across treatment and control, the intersection of geographical location, applicant type, and gender was used to define randomization strata. The geographical location variable used for this purpose was the local government area (LGA) of the applicant’s residence. Applicant type was one of the following three categories; i) Almajirai boys, ii) IQE girls, and iii) other (PWD, OVC, ESL).
Randomization Unit
Unit of randomization is at the individual level.
Was the treatment clustered?
No

Experiment Characteristics

Sample size: planned number of clusters
5165 Individuals
Sample size: planned number of observations
5165 Individuals
Sample size (or number of clusters) by treatment arms
Treatment: 3066 Individuals
Control: 2099 Individuals
Minimum detectable effect size for main outcomes (accounting for sample design and clustering)
0.079 standard deviations.
Supporting Documents and Materials

Documents

Document Name
Mafita Apprenticeship IE PAP
Document Type
other
Document Description
Pre-analysis plan.
File
Mafita Apprenticeship IE PAP

MD5: 720fecbdb22ef1bbe946313fd620c06f

SHA1: 01bb7c79694f7bd584fa933b535ad897d07e98da

Uploaded At: July 31, 2019

IRB

Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)

IRB Name
National Health Research Ethics Committee of Nigeria (NHREC)
IRB Approval Date
2018-11-11
IRB Approval Number
NHREC/01/01/2007-11/11/2018
Analysis Plan

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Post-Trial

Post Trial Information

Study Withdrawal

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Intervention

Is the intervention completed?
No
Data Collection Complete
Data Publication

Data Publication

Is public data available?
No

Program Files

Program Files
Reports, Papers & Other Materials

Relevant Paper(s)

Reports & Other Materials