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Poverty
Measurement Blues: Some Reflections on the Space
for Understanding ‘Chronic’ and ‘Structural’
Poverty in South Africa*
Dr Andries du Toit
Programme for Land and Agrarian Studies, School
of Government
University of the Western Cape, South Africa
Email: presence@iafrica.com
Click
here to download working paper |
Abstract
This paper explores the challenge of understanding chronic
and structural poverty in South Africa, and questions
the dominance of the econometric imaginary in present-day
development and poverty studies. It argues that measurement-based,
econometric approaches to chronic poverty are dependent
upon mystifying narratives about the nature of poverty
and how it can be known, that they direct attention
away from the underlying structural dimensions of persistent
poverty, and that understanding structural poverty in
turn requires a theorised engagement with the complexities
of social relations, agency, culture and subjectivity.
Valuable as the recent re-recognition of the need to
connect qualitative and quantitative research has been,
attempts at ‘qual-quant’ integration can
remain tied to positivist assumptions, bringing the
risk of a new ‘ordering’ of methodological
dissent that leaves problematic aspects of the econometric
imaginary unchanged. Underlying this process is the
entanglement of poverty research with the ‘government
of poverty’: the attempt to constitute poverty
as something objectively measurable and scientifically
manageable. The paper closes with a consideration of
the ethical and political challenges this poses for
critical researchers and intellectuals in post-colonial
contexts.
*Presented at the Workshop
on Concepts and Methods for Analysing Poverty Dynamics
and Chronic Poverty
Manchester, 23-25 October 2006
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