2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1099-0860.2010.00311.x
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‘Stew Without Bread or Bread Without Stew’: Children’s Understandings of Poverty in Ethiopia

Abstract: This paper explores children's understandings of poverty, ill-being and well-being in Ethiopia using data collected through group exercises with children aged 5-6 and 11-13 participating in Young Lives, an international study of childhood poverty. In some respects the characteristics of poverty reported by children resemble those reported by adults participating in similar exercises. However, the children's addition of appearance and clothing, and their explanations of the reasoning behind the importance of th… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…There is also a vital biographical dimension to human experiences of risk, exposure and responses being shaped by gender, the life‐course, political economy and other factors (Lupton and Tulloch, , p. 332). For example, the social impacts of poverty can be especially significant for older children, for whom the sense of stigma, shame and social exclusion may be particularly debilitating (Bartlett and Minujin, ; Boyden and others, ; Camfield, ; Ridge, ). There are also systematic gender differences in risk perception (Gustafson, ), and gender inequalities in childhood are thought to increase vulnerabilities and impact life‐course outcomes (UNICEF, ).…”
Section: Risk Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is also a vital biographical dimension to human experiences of risk, exposure and responses being shaped by gender, the life‐course, political economy and other factors (Lupton and Tulloch, , p. 332). For example, the social impacts of poverty can be especially significant for older children, for whom the sense of stigma, shame and social exclusion may be particularly debilitating (Bartlett and Minujin, ; Boyden and others, ; Camfield, ; Ridge, ). There are also systematic gender differences in risk perception (Gustafson, ), and gender inequalities in childhood are thought to increase vulnerabilities and impact life‐course outcomes (UNICEF, ).…”
Section: Risk Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Barr and Clark (2007:23) provide empirical support for this in their analysis of a dataset from Cape South Africa which concluded that adaptation to low incomes and limited opportunities is at best partial. Recent research with children in Ethiopia suggests that many children experience an acutely painful awareness of the gap between the life they are living and the one they aspire to, even if to an observer the space between the two appears unbridgeable (Camfield, 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They also experience reduced autonomy and power in relation to adults and older children, but an equally great need for respect and recognition (Camfield, 2010). He discusses the progress that has been made within international development in acknowledging children's 'voice', 'visibility', and their own 'vision' of, for example, poverty.…”
Section: Voice and Visibilitymentioning
confidence: 98%