According to the PhD thesis on poverty in the South and Nabatieh prepared by Fatmeh Ezzedine, which we posted extracts on 28-4-2015 (Click here to get the link) 38.5% of household in the South receive various forms of assistance (educational, health, material, or in-kind) while the highest level of assistance is provided by charitable and/or political organizations both categories accounting for 33% of total aid. The study also shows that 36% of households have problems commuting to their place of work while 62% of households own cars. The same study points out that 25% of households are in charge of 5 persons or more, noting that the age dependency rate in the South is 48.11%. Furthermore, some 30% of surveyed families have a migrant family member whilst 27% of households live in houses of less than 100 square meters and 48% lease their living dwellings. In terms of housing quality, 60% of dwellings are old structures which do not possess basic conditions of salubrity such as natural light, healthy environment, etc… In relation to health matters, only 24% of households do regular medical checkups and with 68% possessing some kind of health insurance of whom 29% are covered by NSSF. Results also indicate that 64% suffer from chronic illnesses and 11.4% have members with mental or physical disabilities. In education, 15% of heads of households cannot read or write and only 30% have had elementary education and did not continue beyond it because of their financial situation. Furthermore, some 60% reported cases of school dropouts and 22% have illiterate family members. Finally and at the social level, the study notes that only 32% of heads of household approve of women’s entry into the job market and 16% approve of women’s participation in politics. To be noted that 46% of the sampled households have affirmed having members that are affiliated in civil society organizations or political parties. (As Safir, 28 April 2015)