The language that global justice theorists use to characterize global poverty, the terms of duty and charity, are detached discourses that fail to capture the reality of poverty as most people currently experience it, as slum dwellers living on the outskirts of the world's megacities. In contrast, the language of alienation better captures the experience of global, urban poverty. This article's aim is to draw from Hannah Arendt to form a new idea of alienation that responds to the specific conditions of urban, global poverty. Arendt posits alienation in terms of the 'loss of the world': the deprivation of durable material structures and lasting institutions that are the preconditions for political speech and action. The language of alienation evidences how the problem of poverty is one of a lack of meaningful work, the kind of work that creates a livable world.
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