2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.worlddev.2004.09.013
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From correlates and characteristics to causes: thinking about poverty from a chronic poverty perspective

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Cited by 184 publications
(103 citation statements)
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“…The economic literature suggests two different philosophies to measure poverty (Green & Hulme, 2005). Whereas the first concept captures a person's economic inability to meet very basic needs, the second measure expresses a certain distance of individual income from the community norm.…”
Section: Choice Of Poverty Thresholdmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The economic literature suggests two different philosophies to measure poverty (Green & Hulme, 2005). Whereas the first concept captures a person's economic inability to meet very basic needs, the second measure expresses a certain distance of individual income from the community norm.…”
Section: Choice Of Poverty Thresholdmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another finding from the literature is that declines into poverty are rarely caused by single events (in fact arguably they are not caused by events at all, but by social processes, see for example, Green and Hulme, (2005) on relational aspects of chronic poverty). This finding is confirmed by the QCA where the poverty drivers it identifies -lack of rainfall, family illness, lack of labour and high food prices -are clearly related.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There was significant upward mobility of favela residents in our three study communities relative to the population of Rio as a whole. The favelas, although they remain stigmatized spaces, did not reflect the chronic poverty discussed in the literature of the Chronic Poverty Research Group in Manchester (Green and Hulme 2005;Moore, 2005) nor did they follow the patterns of advanced marginality described by Wacquant for Chicago ghettos and French banlieu (Wacquant 1996). Instead there was a gradual improvement in living conditions in the older favelas vis-à-vis the city at large, while more recent migrants, who are settling in newly formed favelas (or clandestine subdivisions) in the West Zone, filled in the lower ranks of poverty.…”
Section: The Inequality Issuementioning
confidence: 95%