Red de Desarrollo Social de América Latina y el Caribe
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A Multidimensional Approach to Measuring Child Poverty

 

Autor institucional : UNICEF policy and practice
Autor/Autores: Sharmila Kurukulasuriya and Solrun Engilbertsdottir
Fecha de publicación: February 2011
Alcance geográfico: Mundial
Publicado en: Regional
Descargar: Descargar PDF
Resumen: There is a growing consensus that children experience poverty in ways that are different from adults; and looking at child poverty through an income-consumption lens only is inadequate. The 2005 State of the World’s Children presented the following definition of child poverty: “Children living in poverty experience deprivation of the material, spiritual and emotional resources needed to survive, develop and thrive, leaving them unable to enjoy their rights, achieve their full potential or participate as full and equal members of society”. Using evidence from UNICEF’s ongoing Global Study on Child Poverty in Disparities, this Brief illustrates the importance of looking beyond traditional methods of measuring poverty based on income or consumption levels, and emphasizes the importance of seeking out the multidimensional face of child poverty. This approach further recognizes that the method used in depicting child poverty is crucial to the policy design and implementation of interventions that address children’s needs, especially among the most deprived.
   

 

 

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