Power and the Durability of Poverty: A Critical Exploration of the Links between Culture, Marginality and Chronic Poverty
Author: David Mosse
Date: 2007
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60 pages
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What are the causes of chronic poverty and through what social mechanisms does it persist? How does a weak group become a constituency and a political agenda? This paper from the Chronic Poverty Research Centre draws on case studies from western India. Research on poverty has to be reconnected to knowledge about the way in which socio-economic, political and cultural systems work. Chronic poverty develops in the midst of capitalist growth and is perpetuated by ordinary relations of exploitation and opportunity hoarding. To address it, multi-level and long-term strategies are needed.
Chronic poverty can be seen as an outcome of the historical and contemporary dynamics of capitalism, with its relations of accumulation, dispossession, differentiation and exploitation. The case of poor tribal people in western India highlights the relations of dispossession and primitive accumulation associated with colonial capitalism but extended into post-colonial times.
Resource extraction is one of the poverty-generating aspects of capitalism. The alliances and class interests involved in it have a bearing on the constrained livelihoods of poor forest-dependent tribal cultivators. Engagement with markets arises from and reproduces unequal power relations. Furthermore, strategies of accumulation and pauperisation are interlinked.
Nevertheless, the processes of impoverishment are never narrowly economic. Inequality is perpetuated and stabilised by social mechanisms such as categorical inequality and adaptation.
Chronic poverty is the product of historically rooted multi-level relations of appropriation and exploitation. The strategies to address this poverty and change power relations are correspondingly multi-level and long-term:
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Source:
Mosse D., 2007, 'Power and the Durbaility of Poverty: A Critical Exploration of the Links between Culture, Marginality and Chronic Poverty', Chronic Poverty Research Centre, Manchester
Author:
David Mosse
, dm21[at]soas.ac.uk
Organisation: Chronic Poverty Research Centre, http://www.chronicpoverty.org/