Social Isolation and its Relationship to Multidimensional Poverty

Most governments and policy makers define poverty by income. Yet poor people define their poverty more broadly, including lack of education, health, housing, empowerment, employment, personal security and more. As such, no one factor is able to capture all the aspects that contribute to poverty, mak...

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Main Authors: Kim Samuel, Sabina Alkire, John Hammock, China Mills, Diego Zavaleta
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ophi.org.uk/social-isolation-and-its-relationship-to-multidimensional-poverty/
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:qeh:ophiwp:ophiwp080 2023-05-15T16:16:01+02:00 Social Isolation and its Relationship to Multidimensional Poverty Kim Samuel Sabina Alkire John Hammock China Mills Diego Zavaleta https://ophi.org.uk/social-isolation-and-its-relationship-to-multidimensional-poverty/ unknown https://ophi.org.uk/social-isolation-and-its-relationship-to-multidimensional-poverty/ preprint ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:41:07Z Most governments and policy makers define poverty by income. Yet poor people define their poverty more broadly, including lack of education, health, housing, empowerment, employment, personal security and more. As such, no one factor is able to capture all the aspects that contribute to poverty, making poverty a multidimensional concept. One dimension of poverty that has been often overlooked is social connectedness. This paper argues that social connectedness is an important missing ingredient of multidimensional poverty, with social isolation being a central component. We illustrate the concepts of social isolation and social connectedness using examples from South Africa and Mozambique, and the First Nations of Canada, as well as the work of Special Olympics International around the world. Report First Nations RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Most governments and policy makers define poverty by income. Yet poor people define their poverty more broadly, including lack of education, health, housing, empowerment, employment, personal security and more. As such, no one factor is able to capture all the aspects that contribute to poverty, making poverty a multidimensional concept. One dimension of poverty that has been often overlooked is social connectedness. This paper argues that social connectedness is an important missing ingredient of multidimensional poverty, with social isolation being a central component. We illustrate the concepts of social isolation and social connectedness using examples from South Africa and Mozambique, and the First Nations of Canada, as well as the work of Special Olympics International around the world.
format Report
author Kim Samuel
Sabina Alkire
John Hammock
China Mills
Diego Zavaleta
spellingShingle Kim Samuel
Sabina Alkire
John Hammock
China Mills
Diego Zavaleta
Social Isolation and its Relationship to Multidimensional Poverty
author_facet Kim Samuel
Sabina Alkire
John Hammock
China Mills
Diego Zavaleta
author_sort Kim Samuel
title Social Isolation and its Relationship to Multidimensional Poverty
title_short Social Isolation and its Relationship to Multidimensional Poverty
title_full Social Isolation and its Relationship to Multidimensional Poverty
title_fullStr Social Isolation and its Relationship to Multidimensional Poverty
title_full_unstemmed Social Isolation and its Relationship to Multidimensional Poverty
title_sort social isolation and its relationship to multidimensional poverty
url https://ophi.org.uk/social-isolation-and-its-relationship-to-multidimensional-poverty/
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://ophi.org.uk/social-isolation-and-its-relationship-to-multidimensional-poverty/
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