In Ireland, as in many other European countries, children are more likely to experience income poverty and material deprivation compared to other age groups of the population. Some families experience poverty as a transitory state, while others remain trapped in poverty for protracted periods (for example, Bane and Ellwood, 1986; Jenkins and Rigg, 2001). This is an important policy issue, as international research has shown that persistent poverty has negative effects short- and long-term) on children’s physical, social, emotional and psychological wellbeing and life chances (Duncan et al., 1998, 2018). The Growing up in Ireland(GUI) survey provides a unique opportunity to study children and young people’s experience of poverty in Ireland f...
The patterns of economic and structural change affecting family life in recent years mean that there...
Over the period 2004 to 2012, income poverty and material deprivation among children were significan...
Growing Up in Ireland is the national longitudinal study of children. Its core objectives include de...
New research by the ESRI highlights trends in child poverty during the Great Recession of 2008 and s...
The welfare of children is a key concern of Irish society and of government policy. A major new proj...
Life on a low income is the norm for a large proportion of our society. One in every six people in I...
Growing Up in Ireland is the national longitudinal study of children. It tracks the development of t...
Child poverty is one of the most critical issues facing public policy in Ireland and is also an issu...
This study has two aims. The first is to use results from the Living in Ireland Surveys from 1994 to...
This study uses data gathered as part of the 2001 Living in Ireland Survey (LIIS) to monitor the evo...
This study is the latest in a series monitoring the evolution of poverty, based on data gathered by ...
This report provides a descriptive analysis of the findings from detailed interviews conducted betwe...
New Growing Up in Ireland research paints a picture of the lives of 17/18-year-olds in 2016: general...
Although relative income poverty rates vary from year to year, the rankings of different industriali...
In Ireland, as in many European countries, the rate of poverty and deprivation is higher for childre...
The patterns of economic and structural change affecting family life in recent years mean that there...
Over the period 2004 to 2012, income poverty and material deprivation among children were significan...
Growing Up in Ireland is the national longitudinal study of children. Its core objectives include de...
New research by the ESRI highlights trends in child poverty during the Great Recession of 2008 and s...
The welfare of children is a key concern of Irish society and of government policy. A major new proj...
Life on a low income is the norm for a large proportion of our society. One in every six people in I...
Growing Up in Ireland is the national longitudinal study of children. It tracks the development of t...
Child poverty is one of the most critical issues facing public policy in Ireland and is also an issu...
This study has two aims. The first is to use results from the Living in Ireland Surveys from 1994 to...
This study uses data gathered as part of the 2001 Living in Ireland Survey (LIIS) to monitor the evo...
This study is the latest in a series monitoring the evolution of poverty, based on data gathered by ...
This report provides a descriptive analysis of the findings from detailed interviews conducted betwe...
New Growing Up in Ireland research paints a picture of the lives of 17/18-year-olds in 2016: general...
Although relative income poverty rates vary from year to year, the rankings of different industriali...
In Ireland, as in many European countries, the rate of poverty and deprivation is higher for childre...
The patterns of economic and structural change affecting family life in recent years mean that there...
Over the period 2004 to 2012, income poverty and material deprivation among children were significan...
Growing Up in Ireland is the national longitudinal study of children. Its core objectives include de...