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Poverty, material deprivation, and children’s well-being. No Wrong Door conference October 23 rd 2012 Gill Main gm544@york.ac.uk Bernie Flanagan - CYC Debbie Adair - CYC. What is poverty?. In pairs or small groups, discuss: What does the word ‘poverty’ mean to you?
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Poverty, material deprivation, and children’s well-being No Wrong Door conference October 23rd 2012 Gill Main gm544@york.ac.uk Bernie Flanagan - CYC Debbie Adair - CYC
What is poverty? • In pairs or small groups, discuss: • What does the word ‘poverty’ mean to you? • What kinds of associations does the word ‘poverty’ have for you?
Ways of understanding poverty • Absolute poverty – • failure to meet basic biological needs • Primarily used in the developing world • Relative poverty – • Inability to live according to basic social and cultural norms • Dominant in the developed world • In reality, very difficult to distinguish between the two. But the meaning of poverty is highly contingent on space and time – • ‘Rich’ in the UK 100 years ago would be ‘poor’ now • ‘Rich’ in the developing world would be ‘poor’ in the developed world
Relative poverty is still a huge problem • Low birth rate, higher infant mortality rates, higher incidences of illness, disease and accidents in infancy and childhood • Lower educational attendance and attainment – more poor children grow up to be NEET, more have no qualifications. • Higher chance of low-paid work or worklessness in adulthood • Shorter lives – children who grow up in poverty have lower life expectancies than other children
Conceptions of poverty • Income poverty • Most common conception of poverty • Used in most policy and academic studies • What most people think of when ‘poverty’ is mentioned • Material deprivation • Direct measure of poverty – money is a way of acquiring decent living standards; material deprivation is a lack of decent living standards • Used in some UK poverty measures – combined low income and material deprivation • Social exclusion • Focus on processes involved in poverty – how lack of physical, social and psychological resources interact • Popular term, but lacks consistent and coherent definition and usage • Well-being • Very hot topic in policy at the moment! • Complete lack of consistent or coherent definition and usage • But the idea of a focus on ‘a good life’ rather than physical resources very appealing to lots of people
Your thoughts and experiences • What kinds of poverty do you encounter in your day-to-day work with children and young people? • How do you think poverty impacts on the lives of the children and young people who you work with? • What kind of conception of poverty do you think best suits your approach to working with children and young people? • How do you think an understanding of different ways of looking at poverty might inform or change how you work with children and young people?
Poverty in York - See Handout; • York has less poverty than most local authorities; • But it is concentrated in certain geographic areas and demographic groups and UK has low social mobility; • Massive challenges: • National prediction for future is rise; • Economic outlook; • Benefit changes; • Will policy progress social mobility.
Responses to Poverty • National Strategy; • Last government did much through benefit system and tax credits; • This government philosophy is to give families tools to work their way out of poverty; • Locally Strategy: • York Fairness Commission; • Targeting of support; • Work with those most affected; • Early Education.
Measuring material deprivation – what do children need? • Adult-derived list of items: • A family holiday away from home at least one week per year • Enough bedrooms for every child over 10 of a different sex to have their own room • Leisure equipment such as sports equipment or a bicycle • Celebrations on special occasions such as birthdays, Christmas or other religious festivals • Go swimming at least once a month • A hobby or leisure activity • Friends round for tea or a snack once a fortnight • Toddler group/nursery/playgroup at least once a week • Go on school trips • Outdoor space or facilities nearby where they can play safely
Measuring material deprivation – what do children need? • Child-derived list of items: • Pocket money once a week • Money to save each month • Brand-name trainers • An iPod or similar MP3 player • Cable or satellite TV at home • A garden or somewhere similar nearby to spend time safely • Access to a family car • Clothes to fit in with other people their age • A holiday away from home for one week each year • Monthly day-trips with family
Why the differences? • Well-being vs well-becoming • Adults tend to think of children as adults-to-be. Children think of themselves as beings as well as becomings. • Children tend to conceptualise poverty in terms of social exclusion • In focus groups, children reported being bullied and excluded if they lacked the ‘right’ clothes or the ‘right’ shoes • Some children felt that clothes and shoes should not matter, but they also told us that they would bully or exclude their friends if they were not dressed fashionably • Children who did not listen to the same music and watch the same TV programmes as their friends were unable to join in with conversations • Children were sensitive to the needs of their parents as well as to their own needs – things like a family holiday and family day-trips were important because they enhance family relationships by allowing children and parents to spend time together free from day-to-day stresses
Your thoughts • Based on your experiences, how do you think children and adults differ in how they understand and experience poverty? • How do you think these differences in conceptions can be used to help inform your work with children and young people? • How do you think policy frameworks (whether nationally, locally, or within organisations you work in) be informed to help reduce the impact of material deprivation on children’s lives?