Scaling Up Local Perceptions of Poverty to Country Level: A Proof of Concept for Rural Honduras
<p>This work is about bringing together different perceptions of poverty to improve the design of poverty alleviation policies. A case study in Honduras shows how locally derived poverty indicators, developed from village-level participatory appraisals of perceptions of poverty, can be extrapolated to country level using raw census data. The “well-being index,†an average of several indicators, is robust and reflects actual local perceptions with 90% accuracy at village level. Because the index includes information that corresponds to the real-life situation of the poor, I suggest that policymakers consider building and using such bottom-up indicators. This implies a shift from economic to critical thinking that would lead to policies that are more easily adopted and monitored locally.</p>
Year of publication: |
2010
|
---|---|
Authors: | Leclerc, Gregoire |
Published in: |
Poverty & Public Policy. - Policy Studies Organization, ISSN 1944-2858. - Vol. 2.2010, 2, 5, p. 5-5
|
Publisher: |
Policy Studies Organization |
Subject: | Poverty policy | measurement | and mapping | poverty | mapping | participatory | Honduras | census | policy | scaling up | methodology | rural |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
AMERICA'S FORGOTTEN PEOPLE AND PLACES: ENDING THE LEGACY OF POVERTY IN THE RURAL SOUTH
Allen-Smith, Joyce E., (2000)
-
Migration and Poverty in India: A Multi-Patterned and Complex Reality
Shah, Amita, (2013)
-
Banjade, Ishwari Prasad, (2024)
- More ...