Abstract title: | Insights on poverty |
Author: | Deb Johnson |
Issue: | Volume 12, Number 2 - 2002 |
Many development agencies seek to work on behalf of the poor and the poorest of the poor, often creating external definitions of poverty and of people living in poverty that are based on a complex list of things that the poor do not have. There are others who have spearheaded efforts to define poverty based on criteria derived from members of (largely) rural communities, many of whom would be considered poor. All these definitions ultimately result in some type of grouping of people into different categories of poor people. By creating a list of characteristics of poverty, agencies believe that they are better able to target the poor as beneficiaries of interventions to eradicate poverty. This article is intended to challenge development organisations (governmental and non-governmental) to look beyond simple definitions of poverty that are based on static characteristics. It is intended to provoke readers to re-evaluate some of their ideas about definitions of poverty; and to critically examine their agencys role in the business of poverty.
Previous |
Abstracts Main Page |
Next Abstract |