Poverty

Front Cover
Polity, Dec 10, 2004 - Political Science - 238 pages
Poverty remains one of the most urgent issues of our time. In this stimulating new textbook, Ruth Lister introduces students to the meaning and experience of poverty in the contemporary world.

The book opens with a lucid discussion of current debates around the definition and measurement of poverty in industrialized societies, before embarking on a thought-provoking and multi-faceted exploration of its conceptualization. It draws on thinking in the field of international development and real life accounts to emphasize aspects of poverty such as powerlessness, lack of voice, loss of dignity and respect.

In so doing, the book embraces the relational, cultural, symbolic as well as material dimensions of poverty and makes important links between poverty and other concepts like well-being, capabilities, social divisions and exclusion, agency and citizenship. It concludes by making the case for reframing the politics of poverty as a claim for redistribution and recognition. The result is a rich and insightful analysis, which deepens and broadens our understanding of poverty today.


This book will be essential reading for all students in the social sciences, as well as researchers, activists and policy-makers.

From inside the book

Contents

Introduction
1
Defining Poverty
12
Measuring Poverty
37
Inequality Social Divisions and the Differential Experience of Poverty
51
Poverty and Social Exclusion
74
From Othering to Respect
99
From Getting By to Getting Organized
124
Poverty Human Rights and Citizenship
158
From Concept to Politics
176
Notes
190
References
195
Index
229
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About the author (2004)

Ruth Lister is Professor of Social Policy in the Department of Social Sciences, Loughborough University.

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