Toward an economic sociology of chronic poverty: enhancing the rigor and relevance of social theory. CPRC Working Paper 104.

Abstract

In recognizing that poverty is \"multi-dimensional\", contemporary policy discourses - drawing on scholarship on 'networks', 'exclusion', and 'culture' - have made important (if often underappreciated) steps to incorporate insights from social and political theory, but these (hardwon) gains now need to be consolidated, advanced and sharpened. To build significantly on them, coherent theories of and useful policy responses to chronic poverty require attention to three additional (and interrelated) realms, which must cumulatively be able to

  1. provide a clear but distinctive model of human behaviour,
  2. explain how and why poverty persists as part of broader processes of economic prosperity and social change,
  3. account for the mechanisms by which power is created, maintained and challenged, and
  4. readily lend themselves to informing (and iteratively learning from) a new generation of supportable poverty reduction policies and practices.

These three additional realms - social relations, rules systems, and meaning systems - are deeply grounded in a long tradition of social and political theory, and offer an opportunity to take a next step towards more faithfully incorporating the full richness of social science into poverty policy and practice.

Citation

Toward an economic sociology of chronic poverty: enhancing therigor and relevance of social theory. CPRC Working Paper 104, Manchester: IDPM/Chronic Poverty Research Centre (CPRC), UK, ISBN 978-1-906433-03-1, iii + 17 pp.

Toward an economic sociology of chronic poverty: enhancing the rigor and relevance of social theory. CPRC Working Paper 104.

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2007