Poverty is a Person

$22.95

Human Agency, Women and Caribbean Households

By: Theresa Ann Rajack-Talley

Ian Randle Publishers Bools on Amazon Kindle

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Description

In the Caribbean, poverty is the other side of paradise. Economic hardship and social exclusion coexist with idyllic beaches and picturesque scenes of island life, and poor communities, both rural and urban, with substandard living conditions and a lack of access to basic services, belie the story often sold in tourist brochures.

In Poverty is a Person, Theresa Ann Rajack-Talley, in a participatory approach to development studies, raises the voices of those usually muted in poverty research.  The people-centred approach forces a questioning of statistical data on poverty and how that data is used to craft responses and solutions to meeting the needs of the most marginalized persons in Caribbean societies. The book provides a synopsis of poverty from a “people perspective” and is supported by case studies of households and communities. The lack of humanity in traditional poverty studies is brought to the fore and in particular, the gender dimension of poverty – what it is that women do on a daily basis to survive and provide for their families.

Rajck-Talley, in a refreshing take on research and development, highlights how social inclusion can influence positive change and improvement and how the employment of social capital can be harnessed as an important element in poverty reduction. In pulling together an understanding of social exclusion, women’s roles in negotiating poverty, and the role of human agency generally, Poverty is a Person highlights the need to remove the prohibitive parameters of traditional poverty studies and suggests a paradigm shift in the approach of Caribbean countries to employ a more effective and targeted approach to the multidimensional facets of poverty.

Additional information

Weight 1 lbs
Dimensions 9 × 6 in
ISBN

978-976-637-895-0

Binding

Paperback

Page Count

270

Publication date

January 2016

About the Author

Theresa Ann Rajack-Talley is the Associate Dean for International Diversity and Engagement Programmes in the College of Arts & Sciences and an Associate Professor and former Chair of the Department of Pan African Studies at the University of Louisville, Kentucky. With over 25 years of research experience on social inequality, race, gender and poor households in the Caribbean, USA, West and East Africa, she has written widely on understanding poverty and poverty alleviation.

Contents

Introduction

  1. An Overview of Poverty in the Caribbean 
  2. Measuring Human Poverty 
  3. The Socio-Psychological Pain of Poverty 
  4. Are More Families Poor Because of the Increase in Female-Headed Households? 
  5. Female Breadwinners 
  6. Women, Change and Power
  7. Social Capital, Agency and Poor Communities 
  8. Humanizing Poverty Research and Adopting Gender Approaches as We Move Forward 

Notes 

References 

Index

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