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Placing Poverty in Context: A Case Study
Author(s) -
Gopinath Deepak,
Nair Murali
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
poverty and public policy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.206
H-Index - 4
ISSN - 1944-2858
DOI - 10.1002/pop4.70
Subject(s) - poverty , context (archaeology) , argument (complex analysis) , state (computer science) , economic growth , basic needs , political science , sociology , economics , geography , computer science , archaeology , algorithm , biochemistry , chemistry
The “poverty‐in‐context” approach to understanding poverty is shaped by the needs and priorities of a particular context, and it can be used as the basis for identifying pro‐poor projects in local strategies such as City Development Plans. A key argument for the introduction of the City Development Plans initiative (2007–2012) in India was to move away from national conceptions of and responses to poverty and to instead focus on engaging with local understandings of poverty. Through a case study of the City Development Plan initiative in Trivandrum, the capital city of the Kerala state in southern India, we argue that an understanding of poverty at the local level did not accommodate contextual needs and priorities; consequently, we develop a poverty‐in‐context approach based on semi‐structured qualitative interviews with various stakeholders in the case study area. The article concludes by suggesting how in the future a poverty‐in‐context approach might be used to shape pro‐poor policy in general and preparation of City Development Plans in particular.

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