The International Glossary on Poverty (Comparative Research Programme on Poverty: International Studies in Poverty Research)

The International Glossary on Poverty (Comparative Research Programme on Poverty: International Studies in Poverty Research)

by PaulSpicker (Editor), ElseOyen (Editor), David S . Gordon (Editor), RobertPinker (Editor)

Synopsis

This unique international glossary provides an authoritative guide to some 200 technical terms used in contemporary scholarly research on poverty. Each entry contains definitions and explanations, followed by a select reading list of relevant journal articles and books. The Glossary has been compiled by scholars from a number of countries and international agencies with the intention of sensitising researchers, students and policy makers working in a variety of disciplines to the complexities of the issues relating to the subject of poverty. In particular, the Glossary will help overcome the current difficulties arising from the absence of an agreed vocabulary, as well as the unfamiliarity of terms and concepts in one relevant discipline to those operating in others. The multidimensional character of poverty becomes clear and a special effort has been made to include non-Western approaches and concepts with a view to facilitating comparative poverty studies. Professor Robert Pinker of the London School of Economics (LSE) introduces the Glossary by examining the current state of poverty research. Dr Paul Spicker, one of the volume's editors, reviews and explains the many different and competing meanings associated with the word poverty.

$82.59

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 160
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Zed Books Ltd
Published: 01 Feb 1999

ISBN 10: 1856496880
ISBN 13: 9781856496889

Author Bio
David S. Gordon is Professorial Research Fellow in Social Justice at the University of Bristol.

Paul Spicker is a writer and commentator on social policy and a Fellow at the International Social Science Council's Comparative Research Programme on Poverty (CROP)