posted on 2024-09-06, 07:03authored byRobert Chambers
This paper explores how professionals' universal,
reductionist and standardized views of poverty differ from those of the poor themselves. Poverty line thinking concerned
with income-poverty and employment thinking concerned with jobs, project Northern concerns on the South, where the realities
of the poor are local, diverse, often complex and dynamic. Examples illustrate how poor people's criteria differ from those
assumed for them by professionals. The paper also discusses
neglected dimensions of deprivation including vulnerability,
seasonality, powerlessness and humiliation. In the new understandings of poverty, wealth as an objective is replaced by wellbeing and "employment" in jobs by livelihood. The final
sections argue for altruism and reversals to enable poor people
to analyze and articulate their own needs, and they conclude
with the implications for policy and practice of putting first the
priorities of the poor.
History
Publisher
Sage
Citation
Chambers, R. 1995. Poverty and livelihoods: whose reality counts? Environment and Urbanization, Vol. 7, No. 1 (April 1995), pp 137-204