Member Publications

 

Journal articles, book chapters and working papers on relational poverty topics


Journal Article: Cookie cutter cooperatives in the KwaZulu-Natal school nutrition programme

November 13

Alan Beesley and Richard Ballard This article examines an initiative by the KwaZulu-Natal provincial government to increase the income...

Read more

Progress Report: Geographies of Development II: Cash transfers and the reinvention of development for the poor

November 13

Richard Ballard, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa Since the mid-1990s, a number of governments in the global South have instituted...

Read more

Progress Report: Geographies of Development: without the poor

November 13

Richard Ballard, University of KwaZulu‐Natal, Durban, South Africa Some contemporary narratives of development give privileged status to middle...

Read more


Journal Article: Esperando otro 17 de Octubre: la identidad de clase media y la experiencia de la crisis de 2001 en Argentina

November 13

Ezequiel Adamovsky, Universidad de Buenos Aires Este trabajo se propone contribuir a una mejor comprensión de la dimensión política de la...

Read more

Article: «Clase media»: reflexiones sobre los (malos) usos académicos de una categoría

November 13

Ezequiel Adamovsky, Universidad de Buenos Aires Para gobiernos, organismos internacionales y muchos académicos, una suerte de...

Read more

Article: Whose crisis? Spatial imaginaries of class, poverty and vulnerability

October 26

Sarah Elwood and Victoria Lawson, Department of Geography, University of Washington In the recent recession in the US (termed by some The Great...

Read more


Journal Article: De-centering Poverty Studies: middle class alliances and the social construction of poverty

October 26

Victoria Lawson with Middle Class Poverty Politics Research Group In this lecture I explore relational poverty analysis to take seriously the...

Read more

Journal Article: Encountering poverty: space, class and poverty politics

October 26

Vicky Lawson and Sarah Elwood, University of Washington A spoof called ‘Occupy Wall Street Divided’ draws ironic attention to class segregation...

Read more