A dominant conception of poverty among many researchers is that it is a form of deprivation. There is, however, more focus on the idea of poverty as physical deprivation than there is on psychological deprivation. I argue that poverty is as much a psychological deprivation as it is a physical deprivation and propose a new index that explicitly takes the psychological into account in poverty measurement. I show that most extant literature tends to focus more on physical deprivations which poverty causes. I discuss some poverty indices which are employed to measure levels of poverty and highlight their inadequacy. Employing the conversational method, I tap into Odera Oruka’s ideas to offer the Human Minimum Measure (HMM) as a model that might...
How many poor people are there in the world? This simple question is surprisingly difficult to answe...
Multidimensional measures provide an alternative lens through which poverty may be viewed and unders...
How we think about need or deprivation-how we judge its severity, its causes and effects, and the pr...
A dominant conception of poverty among many researchers is that it is a form of deprivation. There i...
Ending poverty is a moral and ethical aim, and living without poverty is one of the human rights. To...
At the turn of the millennium, problems of poverty measurement was reopened in development discourse...
The focus of the international community on poverty reduction has been gaining momentum since the ea...
As we enter the 2020s, global poverty is still a grave and persistent problem. Alleviating...
Poverty is multidimensional in nature. Poverty is associated not only with insufficient income or co...
Global and local Poverty has been subject of study since early times, now a day, it seems like pove...
The concepts of poverty, poverty line, levels of income and expenditure, low income and inequality h...
It is clear that the World Bank definition of poverty is outdated and requires revision. A brief rev...
This chapter documents a participatory approach to developing a new, gender-sensitive measure of dep...
Multidimensional measures provide an alternative lens through which poverty may be viewed and unders...
Detailed analyses of poverty and wellbeing in developing countries, based on household surveys, have...
How many poor people are there in the world? This simple question is surprisingly difficult to answe...
Multidimensional measures provide an alternative lens through which poverty may be viewed and unders...
How we think about need or deprivation-how we judge its severity, its causes and effects, and the pr...
A dominant conception of poverty among many researchers is that it is a form of deprivation. There i...
Ending poverty is a moral and ethical aim, and living without poverty is one of the human rights. To...
At the turn of the millennium, problems of poverty measurement was reopened in development discourse...
The focus of the international community on poverty reduction has been gaining momentum since the ea...
As we enter the 2020s, global poverty is still a grave and persistent problem. Alleviating...
Poverty is multidimensional in nature. Poverty is associated not only with insufficient income or co...
Global and local Poverty has been subject of study since early times, now a day, it seems like pove...
The concepts of poverty, poverty line, levels of income and expenditure, low income and inequality h...
It is clear that the World Bank definition of poverty is outdated and requires revision. A brief rev...
This chapter documents a participatory approach to developing a new, gender-sensitive measure of dep...
Multidimensional measures provide an alternative lens through which poverty may be viewed and unders...
Detailed analyses of poverty and wellbeing in developing countries, based on household surveys, have...
How many poor people are there in the world? This simple question is surprisingly difficult to answe...
Multidimensional measures provide an alternative lens through which poverty may be viewed and unders...
How we think about need or deprivation-how we judge its severity, its causes and effects, and the pr...