The Process of Social Exclusion: The Dynamics of an Evolving Concept
Author: Hilary Silver
Date: 2007
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25 pages
(146KB)
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What is social exclusion and is it a more useful concept for tackling disadvantage than poverty? This paper from the Chronic Poverty Research Centre documents some of the mechanisms of individuals’ downward spiral, with the accumulation of dimensions of exclusion. The study of social exclusion aims to transcend poverty’s narrow focus on monetary or material resource distribution. Exclusion as a process of progressive social rupture is a more comprehensive and complex conceptualisation of social disadvantage.
There have long existed poverty thresholds that allow policymakers to document trends in poverty. For social exclusion, there are no formal ‘exclusion thresholds’ to cross. Rather, at any one time, people are situated on a multidimensional continuum and may be moving towards inclusion in one or another sense, or towards a state of comprehensive, cumulative social rupture. This process has been labelled social ‘disaffiliation’ or ‘disqualification’, among other terms, and encompasses humiliation as well as social isolation.
At a more macro-level, groups, communities, and societies also may undergo a process of social exclusion from larger collectives in which progressive isolation and a decline of solidarity give rise to new social boundaries between insiders and outsiders. The process of residential segregation is a notable example. Despite the European Union’s designation of common exclusion indicators, national differences in the meaning of social exclusion, in contrast to poverty, may impede comparative study. The concept and its measures are still evolving.
There are a number of commonalities between the exclusion perspective and that of chronic poverty. But social exclusion overcomes some of the problems associated with the chronic poverty approach:
The difficulty in defining social exclusion makes it hard to measure. However, at its best, social exclusion theory acknowledges the structural sources of the process rather than the characteristics of the excluded.
Access full text: available online
Source:
Silver, H., 2007, 'The Process of Social Exclusion: The Dynamics of an Evolving Concept', Chronic Poverty Research Centre, Manchester
Organisation: Chronic Poverty Research Centre, http://www.chronicpoverty.org/