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Rethinking Poverty - Assets, Social Exclusion, Resilience and Human Rights in Barbados (Paperback)
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Rethinking Poverty - Assets, Social Exclusion, Resilience and Human Rights in Barbados (Paperback)
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Researchers have been grappling with finding an adequate means of
defining poverty since the nineteenth century, yet no universal
consensus exists today. Much of the debate has been concerned with
whether poverty should be defined in absolute or relative terms.
Today, most countries use income as a measure of poverty, and the
extent of poverty in a country is assessed on the basis of a
poverty line, as is the case in Barbados. Human deprivation cannot
be accurately portrayed purely by of a lack of financial resources;
however, a variety of factors, including unemployment, violations
of human rights, increased migration, weakening of family ties, and
reduced social and political participation may combine to severely
reduce the quality of living conditions for large sectors of
Caribbean society. Corin Bailey, Jonathan Lashley and Christine
Barrow propose the use of a more comprehensive measure of
deprivation, one that takes into consideration the range of
resources or assets necessary to maintain an acceptable standard of
living. They argue that the absence of critical physical, human,
social and environmental assets leaves individuals and groups
vulnerable to social exclusion and they offer a framework that
provides a unique contemporary approach to the study of poverty in
the Caribbean. Rather than relying solely on statistical data, the
authors use qualitative data in the form of testimony from the
excluded to allow them to explain, in their own words, the
realities of exclusion that they face and the manner in which the
absence of the assets described leaves them vulnerable to
deprivation. This use of mixed methodology includes a survey of
living conditions as well as qualitative participatory poverty
assessments designed to adequately capture the experience of
exclusion in Barbados and an institutional assessment that seeks to
determine what government and civil society organizations have done
to reduce poverty. Rethinking Poverty is a refreshingly innovative
analysis of poverty in the region.
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